The most popular dialect of Manx is Northern Manx.
There's only really one Scots Gaelic dialect remaining, which is Highland Scots.
The most popular Irish dialect is Connacht Irish.
'Faith and begorrah' means "sure and by God". This is in the dialect of English called Hiberno-English, not in Irish Gaelic, although there are several features of this dialect owing to the Gaelic.
In Ireland - GAA is the most popular- that's Hurling and Gaelic Football.
Scots dialect of English or Scottish Gaelic?
That is not a Scottish Gaelic word. It may be a word in the English dialect of Scotland ("Scots" or "Lallans"). Gaelic has no 'w' or 'y'.
ár teaghlaigh but as with many Irish words this changes with dialect and even linguistic colloquialisms.
In modern times, 'Celtic' people are Irish, Scottish highlanders, Manx, Welsh, Bretons and Cornish. Those are the only regions where Celtic languages are still spoken.
Because of dialect variation it can vary, but often it's 'finn'.
The phrase is Scots dialect and means 'not away to stay away'.
In Irish, the word 'fé' is the Munster dialect version of the preposition 'under'.
FOWK AYE (family always). This not Scottish Gaelic but the Scottish dialect of English.
Gaelic football is the most popular sport in Ireland.Other popular sports include hurling, football (soccer) and rugby. Horse racing is also a major sport in Ireland, as is golf.
"Scottish" is not a language but a word to describe something from Scotland. "Scots" is a dialect and "Scottish Gaelic" is a language.