「Irish」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)10ページ目
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He is on the Founder's Committee of the Boston | Irish Famine Memorial. |
The two organisations and the United | Irish League merged in 1900, to re-create the Irish |
Imrama is the debut album of the | Irish black metal band Primordial. |
A Murderous Circus is the third album by | Irish doom metal band Mourning Beloveth. |
lmainhamwood, historically simply Killmainham ( | Irish: Cill Mhaighneann), is a village and townland |
Ballickmoyler or Ballicmoyler ( | Irish: Baile Mhic Mhaoilir) is a small town in Count |
Kilmuckridge ( | Irish: Cill Mhucraise) is a small village in County |
The | Irish (8 MHz) system is shown below. |
ollins (film), 1996 film depicting the life of | Irish leader Michael Collins |
Several-times | Irish minister Michael Woods lives on Kilbarrack Roa |
many distinguished guests, including Haydn and | Irish tenor Michael Kelly. |
It was first described by the | Irish botanist Michael Pakenham Edgeworth as Cotonea |
Subject of the | Irish poet Michael Longley's "Elegy for Fats Waller" |
all her life and was a personal friend of the | Irish republican Michael Collins. |
The | Irish Times' Michael Dwyer rated the film four out o |
Mae Coughlin was born in New York City to | Irish parents Michael Coughlin and Bridget Gorman. |
Paul McGee (born 17 May 1968) is a retired | Irish football midfielder. |
November 1952, Belfast) is a retired Northern | Irish football midfielder. |
Irish Distillers' Midleton distillery has been part | |
Alan Dukes: Former leader of Fine Gael and | Irish government minister |
Thomas Drennan (1696-1768) was an | Irish Presbyterian minister active in advocating pol |
d following discussions between Frazer and the | Irish foreign minister Dermot Ahern. |
Patrick Cooney - Former | Irish Government Minister |
st Walton married Freda Wilson, daughter of an | Irish Methodist Minister, on 23 August 1934. |
xchanged notifications with David Andrews, the | Irish foreign minister. |
ctor Kenneth Norman Ernest Newell OBE DD is an | Irish Presbyterian minister. |
The | Irish Stowe Missal in comparison with later Medieval |
Edward Barron was an | Irish born missionary bishop who led the Catholic mi |
Finnian (or Saint Uinniau) of Movilla Abbey, | Irish Christian missionary, 495-589. |
is about the Pennsylvania politician; for the | Irish medical missionary, see Robert Tomlinson. |
Its Old | Irish and modern phonetic value is [f]. |
han, Charles Patrick, The rise and fall of the | Irish Franciscan monasteries, and memoirs of the Iri |
He was the recipient of the | Irish Association's Montgomery Medal in 1993 for his |
Best Server: Macaila | Irish May Morada (FEU) |
confused with Saint Kenneth (Saint Canice) an | Irish saint most popular in Scotland. |
He was seen as one of the | Irish Party's most promising young members. |
It was limited to British and | Irish poets, mostly (Ezra Pound being allowed a spec |
Guirgis is the son of an | Irish American mother and an Egyptian father. |
Raymond Haynes | Irish Butterflies Moths |
al music used in the song, has been used as an | Irish Republican motivational tune. |
Her | Irish parents moved to England in the late 1950s. |
He was also heavily involved in the | Irish temperance movement to discourage the consumpt |
In 1969, they renamed themselves the | Irish Communist Movement (Marxist-Leninist). |
Most of his research has been centred on the | Irish Republican movement and particularly the histo |
lticist ideas, and modelled its aspirations on | Irish independence movements. |
William Abraham, | Irish Nationalist MP (d.1915). |
Portmuck ( | Irish: Port Muc) |
r cousin Edmund Enright is better known as the | Irish singer Mundy. |
Historically it was called Taghmon ( | Irish: Tigh Munna), after the townland it occupies. |
However the | Irish Royal Munster Fusiliers suffered heavy casualt |
light of his career, he played rugby union for | Irish side Munster. |
Ireland, the phrase has also appeared on many | Irish Republican murals, as an ironic farewell to th |
The | Irish traditional music group The Wolfe Tones hail f |
KnockanStockan is an award-winning | Irish independent music festival now in its fifth ye |
ll, police officer in America and collector of | Irish traditional music (d.1936). |
mporary Music Ensemble, founded in 1976, is an | Irish contemporary music ensemble. |
oots - Award-winning recording of Scottish and | Irish traditional music from the earliest written so |
ongs of Christmas is the twenty-sixth album by | Irish folk music group The Irish Rovers. |
Charles (born 1949, Magherafelt) is a Northern | Irish novelist, music promoter and talent agent. |
Philomena Begley (born October 20, 1950) is an | Irish country music singer. |
He is chairman of the | Irish Electro-Acoustic Music Association. |
The score also includes | Irish folk music arranged by Paddy Moloney and perfo |
is a more sombre dance done to older tradition | Irish Folk music. |
Kevin McGillian is an | Irish traditional musician from Legfordrum in County |
Turlach Boylan, | Irish traditional musician. |
Innaighneorach is one of the earliest recorded | Irish professional musicians. |
The surviving | Irish, including Muskerry, retreated in disorder to |
William Desmond (politician) (died 1941), | Irish Cumann na nGaedheal and Fine Gael party politi |
Ballinadee ( | Irish: Baile na Daibhche) is a village in County Cor |
land was previously called Ballynamanagh (from | Irish: Baile na Manach meaning "townland of the monk |
Coalbrook ( | Irish: Glaise na Ghuail) is a village in the Slievea |
Ballinakil ( | Irish: Baile na Coille) is a small, sparsely populat |
Eslinbridge ( | Irish: Droichead na hEislinne) is a village in Count |
Knocknahur ( | Irish: Cnoc na hIora) is a village in County Sligo, |
The | Irish language name Baile Lochlannach means "Scandin |
The | Irish town name, "An tSnaidhm", means "The Knot" in |
Keller's father was an | Irish immigrant named James Kelleher, who changed hi |
ost townlands are anglisations of the original | Irish language names. |
Irish Grand National: Butler's Cabin, 2007 | |
He grew up in Pittsburgh and has | Irish and Native American ancestry. |
Barclay Pentland (1797 - 12 July 1873) was an | Irish geographer, natural scientist, and traveller. |
es Lawson Drummond (1783, Larne - 1853) was an | Irish physician, naturalist and botanist. |
Thomas Reid (1791-1825), was an | Irish born Naval surgeon. |
Cleary was born of | Irish ancestry, near Greenfield, Indiana, in Hancock |
Joe Boland - sportscaster; founder of the | Irish Football Network |
Cahersiveen is connected to the | Irish road network by the N70 national secondary rou |
The | Irish Socialist Network Online - Website |
The Society runs mainline trains on the | Irish railway network using steam traction and vinta |
Irish Socialist Network, 2009. | |
Carawan typically plays in Old-time music, | Irish, and New Age styles. |
For the neighbourhood of New Orleans, see | Irish Channel, New Orleans. |
He was joint editor of the Royal | Irish Academy's New History of Ireland (9 volumes). |
Hoagland, Kathleen (ed.) (1947) 1000 Years of | Irish Poetry, New York, The Devin-Adair Company |
He is Northern | Irish television news journalist. |
University College Cork, Ireland, and national | Irish student news. |
In August 1999, the IRA, through the | Irish republican newspaper An Phoblacht, denied sanc |
He began writing weekly for two years for the | Irish World newspaper. |
by James Higgins, a staff photographer for the | Irish Voice newspaper. |
He is the brother-in-law of | Irish author Niall Williams. |
Of the fifteen current members of the | Irish cabinet, nine are former UCD students. |
Irish Grove No. 4 Precinct is located in Menard Coun | |
The noggin then became a noigin ( | Irish) or noigean (Gaelic). |
Actually Edward Bransfield was | Irish and not English. |
Provision to make the above declaration in | Irish is not made within the above Act. |
The New Midleton Distillery built by | Irish Distillers now produces most of the Irish whis |
To ensure the integrity of the ingredients of | Irish Coffee, NSAI, Ireland's national standards bod |
In 1977, the | Irish upset number 1 ranked University of San Franci |
In 1987, the | Irish upset number 1 ranked University of North Caro |
in 1944/45, the story focuses on an apolitical | Irish district nurse, Pauline. |
name appears as Michael Hickey rather than the | Irish Micheal O'Hickey. |
Geographically, Scotch | Irish Township occupies 35.22 square miles (91.2 km2 |
During the | Irish Rebellion of 1798 he was murdered along with h |
Waveriders focuses on the | Irish roots of surfing. |
He represented Athenry in the | Irish House of Commons from 1763 to his death. |
Beresford entered the | Irish House of Commons as member for Waterford Count |
During the | Irish Rebellion of 1641, Markethill and its district |
Lifford was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
The | Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin |
Another brother, Patrick, died during the | Irish War of Independence. |
Michael Logue (1840-1924) was an | Irish prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. |
osiah Hort's daughters married into well known | Irish families of that day and not many years after |
Borough was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons to 1800. |
d 1728 he represented Dublin University in the | Irish House of Commons. |
lynakill was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
yborough was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
Colum McCann (born 28 February 1965) is an | Irish writer of literary fiction. |
pe Parreno, "All Hawaii Entrees/Lunar Reggae", | Irish Museum of Modern Art, Charta, 2006: 126 |
Clare was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
N.B. "Sitric" is the | Irish variant of Norwegian "Sigtrygg" |
enham also represented Longford Borough in the | Irish House of Commons. |
Irish Winners of the Victoria Cross (Richard Doherty | |
During the | Irish War of Independence Boland operated alongside |
ilbeggan was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons from 1612 to 1800. |
Irish League of Credit Unions building on Lower Moun | |
y County was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
Ratoath was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons. |
She took a teaching position at the Royal | Irish Academy of Music in the same year. |
In 1995, she was honored as | Irish American of the Year by Irish America magazine |
For the | Irish recipient of the Victoria Cross, see Owen Edwa |
Royal | Irish Academy of Music |
It now houses the | Irish Museum of Modern Art. |
Lisburn was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
n County was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons from 1611 to 1800. |
astlebar was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons from 1614 to 1800. |
d County was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons to 1800. |
lmallock was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
objects indicate the smith was trained in the | Irish style of working. |
he Most Reverend John Healy (1841-1918) was an | Irish clergyman of the Roman Catholic Church. |
tween 1713 and 1727, he sat for Dundalk in the | Irish House of Commons. |
He is a fellow FCARCSI of the | Irish College of Anaesthetists. |
nny City was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
estmeath was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons from 1611 to 1800. |
Beresford entered the | Irish House of Commons in 1661, sitting for Colerain |
Irish Conference of Professional and Service Associa | |
In 1805 it took the title of the 18th (King's | Irish) Regiment of (Light) Dragoons, named for Georg |
Askeaton was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
Irish Congress of Trade Unions | |
Granard was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
1650 - 18 August 1720) was an | Irish Admiral of the Royal Navy. |
In 1728, FitzGerald entered the | Irish House of Commons and sat for Dingle until his |
On the outbreak of the | Irish Rebellion of 1641, Mac Colla found himself in |
tinglass was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons to 1800. |
During the | Irish War of Independence, Irish rebel leader Dennis |
The Second | Irish Life of St Brendan (conflated with the Navigat |
British Voices: From the | Irish War of Independence 1918-1921 Collins Press 20 |
Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin | |
It sent two knights of the shire to the | Irish House of Commons. |
istiogue was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
In 1692, O'Brien entered the | Irish House of Commons, sitting for Clare until 1714 |
It should not be confused with the former | Irish constituency of County Louth (UK Parliament co |
Irish Winners of the Victoria Cross (Richard Doherty | |
constituency in County Cork represented in the | Irish House of Commons to 1800. |
f Dublin from 1917 to 1924 serving through the | Irish War of Independence and the Irish Civil War. |
onstituency in County Meath represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
h County was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
This is an article about an | Irish person of note. |
He was active in the | Irish War of Independence, then in the Irish Civil W |
For the | Irish cricketer of the same name, see William Harrin |
The Chairman ( | Irish: Cathaoirleach) of the Council has the honorif |
In 1810 he was employed on the | Irish estate of the marquess of Downshire. |
Belfast was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
stituency in County Wexford represented in the | Irish House of Commons to 1800. |
Butler represented Carlow County in the | Irish House of Commons from 1730 to 1761. |
725 and 1757, he represented Kilmallock in the | Irish House of Commons. |
In 2011, Lahey was named | Irish American of the Year by Irish America magazine |
Butler represented Carlow County in the | Irish House of Commons from 1703 to 1715. |
illybegs was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
Limavady was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
ent of ecumenism, Father Hurley co-founded the | Irish School of Ecumenics in 1970. |
w County was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
s County was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
Andrew eventually joined the | Irish colony of San Patricio in the department of Me |
e FitzGerald (1771-1851), who took part in the | Irish Rebellion of 1798. |
During that season Lennie received the | Irish Sportmen of the week award (an award given out |
ick City was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons until 1800. |
It was the site of a battle in the | Irish Rebellion of 1798. |
He later fought during the | Irish War of Independence. |
Taghmon was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons to 1800. |
Athy was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons to 1800. |
Dundalk was a constituency represented in the | Irish House of Commons to 1801. |
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