This would be an insult implying that the Irish live "on the wrong side of the tracks."
"Isabelle" doesn't mean anything in Irish, but the Irish version of the name is Sibéal (shibael).
People with a mix of Irish and Scottish heritage.
farming
There is no direct translation of Reyna into Irish. The name Reyna is a variant of the name Reina, meaning "queen" in Spanish. However, the Irish names Riona and Saorla both mean "queen" or "queenly" in Irish.
Eithne.
The word "shanty" is not used much in Ireland. It seems to be a word used mainly by americans. "Shanty Irish" was used to describe the poorest of the poor Irish immigrants, the kind who ended up in shanty town (the origin of the word "shanty" is not known, but it might come from the Irish "sean tí", meaning "old house"). Today "shanty" in the States is a derogatory term for people who in Ireland might be known as culchies but the people so described need not necessarily be of Irish descent.
This is a very general question.. But to answer it literally, a city has a much higher population than a shanty house. I think you actually mean a shanty town? But I can't answer unless you say which shanty town and which city..
Jaunty; showy., A small, mean dwelling; a rough, slight building for temporary use; a hut., To inhabit a shanty.
In a Shanty in Old Shanty Town was created in 1932.
The term shanty town refers to an old, unkempt, poor area of a city or town. It has often been noted the origin is of French or Irish. The french word "chantier" means place, and the word "sean-tig" meaning hut in Irish.
Shanty
The plural of shanty is shanties. As in "the shanties look poor".
My auntie lives in a shanty. The new boutique at the mall is called 'The Panty Shanty'.
Someone who lived in a shanty, i.e. a shack.
A shanty is no more than a shack.
shanty town
'Will' is not an Irish word and has no meaning in Irish.