well in the right text it means "life" e.g uisce beatha=water of life. Which is known as whiskey.
The Irish word for 'life' is beatha.
Uisce Beatha is Irish Gaelic for Water of Life and refers to whiskey Usige Beatha is Scottish Gaelic for Water of Life and refers to whisky
saol / beatha
In Irish: Cothaigh beatha (verify)In Scottish Gaelic: Giullaich beatha (verify)
You could say beatha fholláin or beatha shláintiúil.Maireachtáil shláintiúil would mean 'healthy living';Slí mhaireachtála fholláin means 'a healthy way of life'.
The word "whiskey" in English is an anglicization of the original gaelic. In Scottish Gaelic, whiskey is "uisge beatha", which means "water of life". This name for whiskey might have roots in latin, where distilled spirits were known as aqua vitae or "water of life".
The word "Whiskey" comes from the Irish words "Uisce Beatha" meaning the water of life.
In Irish it's "uisce beatha" (also means whiskey)
Food is "beatha" or "bia".
The English phrase ("ever-lasting", which is really shorthand for "which lasts forever", meaning "which endures eternally") won't translate with the same meaning. You would be better to use a single word with the same meaning, such as "eternal". That can translate as "sìorraidh", although there are other possibilities.
Aingeal na beatha
beatha i ndán dom