To you all in Irish A thabhairt duit go léir
No, you can say "I have a lot of homework." Or "I have to much homework"
"Homework" is always singular, so you would say, "Brian and Emily have finished their homework." If you want a plural to refer to homework from different classes, you can say "homework assignments."
Most kids in that time were educated by their parents, so you could say that all their work was homework.
Hyperbole is the use of exaggeration - you can say anything that would exaggerate the idea, but you already used it by saying "all the time" - you don't do homework all the time because you do plenty of other things besides homework.
how do you say my country in irish
Say you didn't complete your homework. The answer is implied.
Nollaig shona daoibh.
Since the Irish speak English, they would say "Land of the young and free". Of course, it isn't. All lands have a homogeneous mixture of people of all ages.
Irish can speak English. So you can stick with that is you want to.
Not all names are 'translatable'. You would say 'Is mise Lauren' (I'm Lauren).
How do you say "for four days " in irish?