On Rossetta Stone, you can learn it for a fair price.
Irish is a language more complex than English. You have to learn it, and there is no definite answer to that question.
you can learn it in secondry school in Ireland or in an Irish speaking primrary school. There is also a variety of clubs and groups around for people wanting to speak Irish. If you arent living in Ireland though you could just use the internet to learn it :)
If he was educated in an irish secondary school, then unfortunately he had to learn it. Of course nobody in Ireland really speaks irish regularly
Yep:) depending on your age you can go to a place called the Gaeltacht where you learn to speak and write Irish.. it's meant to be amazing.
Yes. Many Irish people still speak Irish every day. It is a compulsory subject in Irish schools and required for some jobs. --- They did, but after the famine they were forced to speak english. This was because many Irish emigrated to england, America and Australia to look for jobs. In schools, the children were beaten if they spoke Irish in order to get them to learn it faster. Thanks to those events, Ireland isn't really the same with Irish anymore.
Yes, there were probably are some Protestants who speak the Irish language. That is not to say that most Protestants speak Irish or that most Irish-speakers are protestant.
According to Keith, he used to speak Irish pretty fluently. He is no longer fluent (because he had no one to speak to him in Irish) but he can still speak a little.
The Irish speak English.
Yes, the majority of Irish people primarily speak English.
They speak both. Irish (Gaelic) and English. Around 40% either speak or at least are competent in Irish. It is a compulsory subject in the Republic in schools. Monolingual Irish speakers are rare and usually found in Western Ireland.
labhair a labhairt - to speak
In the Seanad, which is the name for the Irish senate.