In Irish Gaelic 'the' can be either 'an' or 'na', depending on the grammatical function of the noun to which it relates, i.e. whether it is nominative/accusative, dative or genitive, whether the noun in question is masculine of feminine, and whether it is singular or plural.
I have the impression that it is not a Gaelic word based on the spelling.
If that is the correct spelling, it is not Gaelic.
Cailleann
I know of no spelling for Clayton in Irish or Scottish Gaelic.
CIARÁN is the Irish Gaelic spelling; it is usually anglicized as Kieran.
The Irish (Gaelic) is baineann.The Scottish Gaelic for 'female' is: = 'boireann' or 'boireannach'The Scottish Gaelic for 'male' is = 'fireann'Phonetic spelling/sounding for boireann is: = Borr-inPhonetic spelling/sounding for fireann is: = feeir-un
It is not proper Gaelic spelling: Irish or Scottish Gaelic would not spell a word with "ee". A google search shows your question as the only occurence of the word. .
The Irish spelling is Ruairí; the Scottish spelling is Ruairidh.
The spelling in Scottish Gaelic is A' Mhòr Bheinn.
It's an anglicized spelling of the Irish Gaelic word 'loch' meaning 'lake'.
No Gaelic version.
You don't. Cheyenne is a non-Gaelic, proper name and, as such, has no Gaelic spelling.