No. Some places might accept them, especially near the border with Northern Ireland, but you should bring Euro with you.
You can bring a car to the Republic of Ireland. From Northern Ireland you can drive. You can get a ferry from Britain, the Isle of Man and France. From anywhere else you would not go direct to Ireland by car, as that would involve flying, so you might have to bring a car through one of those countries, if you lived near them. If you were coming from a very long way, you could just rent a car when you get to Ireland.You can bring a car to the Republic of Ireland. From Northern Ireland you can drive. You can get a ferry from Britain, the Isle of Man and France. From anywhere else you would not go direct to Ireland by car, as that would involve flying, so you might have to bring a car through one of those countries, if you lived near them. If you were coming from a very long way, you could just rent a car when you get to Ireland.You can bring a car to the Republic of Ireland. From Northern Ireland you can drive. You can get a ferry from Britain, the Isle of Man and France. From anywhere else you would not go direct to Ireland by car, as that would involve flying, so you might have to bring a car through one of those countries, if you lived near them. If you were coming from a very long way, you could just rent a car when you get to Ireland.You can bring a car to the Republic of Ireland. From Northern Ireland you can drive. You can get a ferry from Britain, the Isle of Man and France. From anywhere else you would not go direct to Ireland by car, as that would involve flying, so you might have to bring a car through one of those countries, if you lived near them. If you were coming from a very long way, you could just rent a car when you get to Ireland.You can bring a car to the Republic of Ireland. From Northern Ireland you can drive. You can get a ferry from Britain, the Isle of Man and France. From anywhere else you would not go direct to Ireland by car, as that would involve flying, so you might have to bring a car through one of those countries, if you lived near them. If you were coming from a very long way, you could just rent a car when you get to Ireland.You can bring a car to the Republic of Ireland. From Northern Ireland you can drive. You can get a ferry from Britain, the Isle of Man and France. From anywhere else you would not go direct to Ireland by car, as that would involve flying, so you might have to bring a car through one of those countries, if you lived near them. If you were coming from a very long way, you could just rent a car when you get to Ireland.You can bring a car to the Republic of Ireland. From Northern Ireland you can drive. You can get a ferry from Britain, the Isle of Man and France. From anywhere else you would not go direct to Ireland by car, as that would involve flying, so you might have to bring a car through one of those countries, if you lived near them. If you were coming from a very long way, you could just rent a car when you get to Ireland.You can bring a car to the Republic of Ireland. From Northern Ireland you can drive. You can get a ferry from Britain, the Isle of Man and France. From anywhere else you would not go direct to Ireland by car, as that would involve flying, so you might have to bring a car through one of those countries, if you lived near them. If you were coming from a very long way, you could just rent a car when you get to Ireland.You can bring a car to the Republic of Ireland. From Northern Ireland you can drive. You can get a ferry from Britain, the Isle of Man and France. From anywhere else you would not go direct to Ireland by car, as that would involve flying, so you might have to bring a car through one of those countries, if you lived near them. If you were coming from a very long way, you could just rent a car when you get to Ireland.You can bring a car to the Republic of Ireland. From Northern Ireland you can drive. You can get a ferry from Britain, the Isle of Man and France. From anywhere else you would not go direct to Ireland by car, as that would involve flying, so you might have to bring a car through one of those countries, if you lived near them. If you were coming from a very long way, you could just rent a car when you get to Ireland.You can bring a car to the Republic of Ireland. From Northern Ireland you can drive. You can get a ferry from Britain, the Isle of Man and France. From anywhere else you would not go direct to Ireland by car, as that would involve flying, so you might have to bring a car through one of those countries, if you lived near them. If you were coming from a very long way, you could just rent a car when you get to Ireland.
Ireland is in the northern hemisphere, so it is winter. The weather is cold and might be snowy.
because you are crazy
The northern Ireland state was gerrymandered to give a unionist protestant majority over the nationalist catholic population of northern Ireland. If the whole of the province or nine countys of ulster had been partitioned into northern Ireland then it would have been 50 50 or in time unionists might even have been a minority.
Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom. The legislature is the Northern Ireland Assembly I have no idea and you should not be looking on here. Their answers are not all true some, people change them and they might be wrong but you wouldn't know now would.
The individual flags of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Southern Ireland is often used incorrectly to refer to the Republic of Ireland and distinguish it from Northern Ireland, so southern Ireland is really just a geographical term, in the same way as you might have southern Canada or southern France or southern Argentina, or the southern part of any country you could mention. Even the term Republic of Ireland is not an official one. The proper name, according to the Irish constitution is Éire or Ireland. So, southern Ireland is in the country that is known as Ireland, which is on the island of Ireland, as is Northern Ireland.
It is not very warm. However Ireland in general has a climate which does not get as cold as other places in the northern hemisphere which are the same distance from the equator. The main reason for that is that Ireland and much of western Europe benefits from the Gulf Stream, a current of warm water that comes from the Mexican Gulf. It helps bring milder weather than might otherwise be the case. So Ireland does not have as cold a winter as it could, but it also does not have as hot a summer as other places in the northern hemisphere which are the same distance from the equator do. This is also due to the Gulf Stream and to the fact that Ireland is on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean.
The troubles mainly took place in Northern Ireland. There were some incidents in the Republic of Ireland and in Britain, though these were rare. Incidents during the troubles were sporadic, not daily open combat as often perceived. So even in Northern Ireland, there could be days or weeks or even months between incidents. As they took place in different parts of Northern Ireland, an individual place might not have an incident for a very long time and some parts never had one. Incidents were more common in areas of higher population, so the bigger towns and cities, like Belfast and Derry.
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (which comprises England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland) and the Republic of Ireland are the countries in the British Isles. Only the UK and the Republic of Ireland are countries in the sense of being members of the United Nations.
ReligionReligion.