One is a Latin language, the other is a Slav language, one uses the Latin alphabet, the other the Cyrillic alphabet, and the grammar and vocabulary have little in common!
French is sometimes offered in Irish schools and universities as a foreign language, but it is not a language that is spoken in Ireland.
Fairly different. A lot of words can be identified as the language is being simplified over the years, but the foundation is different. English is a germanic language, whereas irish is a celtic language
The Irish language is different to most languages, but there are some similar ones, like Scots Gaelic.
Irish is translated "irlandais, irlandaise" in Frenchune balade irlandaise > an Irish balladun café irlandais > an Irish coffee
The French speak French because it is their national language, historically developed from Latin and influenced by Celtic and Germanic languages. French became standardized as the official language in France due to cultural, political, and historical factors.
There are about 450 Languages spoken in India and about 700 different Native American languages. But there is no such language as "Indian".
In the Irish language, they call it Gaeilge, and in the English language they call it Irish.
Always English and Irish. Then sometimes French. There are even some schools who use Irish as there 1st language and use it to communicate all of the time at their school.
in french it is rayure in spanish it is rayas in italin it is stripe in Irish it is stripe that's about all i know but check out a translater online and browse nearly any language
Hebrew is the ancestral language of Jews no different than Italian is the language of Italians, French is the language of the French, etc.
There is no single language called 'Celtic' it is a language family of six different languages.
Irish language = "irische Sprache"