「Irish」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)6ページ目
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Irish Deaf Society | |
See Hear · Contact · | Irish Deaf Journal · Hands On · British Deaf News · |
Irish Deaf Sports Association | |
Why is it always so necessary to mention ' | Irish decent' in every flaming Wiki biography? |
The Notre Dame Fighting | Irish defeated Stanford University, 27-10. |
An Cosantoir, | Irish Defence Journal www.dfmagazine.ie |
ll (1887-1944) was a Lieutenant General in the | Irish Defence Forces. |
Cap badge of the | Irish Defence Forces. |
As such, The Ulster | Irish defenders were willing to fight to the death. |
After the | Irish defense forced a Hawaiʻi 3-and-out, Irish safe |
The | Irish deficit was expected to be 5.5 percent in 2008 |
Although some | Irish delegates continued to attend the British TUC, |
He served on the | Irish delegation to the League of Nations, 1924 and |
1922: The Birth of | Irish Democracy |
/ Erected by the | Irish Democratic League Club, Haslingden (Davitt Bra |
Dorinish ( | Irish: Deoirinis) is an uninhabited island in Clew B |
The Diocese of Derry ( | Irish: Deoise Dhoire) is a diocese in the north of I |
g the 1,000 Guineas, 2,000 Guineas, St. Leger, | Irish Derby, Irish Oaks and Eclipse Stakes. |
boasts a significant proportion of persons of | Irish descent as well as a smaller number of more re |
Dan Davin, New Zealand author of | Irish descent |
Burke, by his own account, was of | Irish descent and born in Louisville, Kentucky. |
She is of Italian and | Irish descent and was raised Catholic. |
Marsden was born to a family of | Irish descent and is a practising Roman Catholic. |
He is of | Irish descent on his father's side and of Croatian d |
She is of English and | Irish descent and has three sisters, including an id |
She was of | Irish descent through her father. |
The workers, many of whom were of | Irish descent, were unsettled by the discovery and w |
Of Northern | Irish descent, he was educated in Launceston, Tasman |
Norris, who is of | Irish descent, is the brother of Chuck Norris. |
e was born in Florenceville, New Brunswick, of | Irish descent, and educated there. |
Lombardo, who is of Italian and | Irish descent, is originally from Glastonbury, Conne |
that moved to the area were almost entirely of | Irish descent, and many hailed from County Kerry one |
astown, Parish of Newcastle, New Brunswick, of | Irish descent, Adams was educated in Douglastown. |
She is of | Irish descent. |
He was of | Irish descent. |
ia) is a U.S. model and actress of Mexican and | Irish descent. |
He was born in Holt, and is of | Irish descent. |
He is of | Irish descent. |
She is of British, Italian and | Irish descent. |
The sisters grew up in Liverpool and were of | Irish descent. |
er was from Madrid, Spain and her mother is of | Irish descent. |
English-born film director and screenwriter of | Irish descent. |
nny Geefs (1807-1883) was a Belgian painter of | Irish descent. |
Both his parents were of | Irish descent. |
He was of Scottish and | Irish descent. |
ght up in Midwestern America, in a family with | Irish descent. |
New Brunswick, the son of Alexander Colter, of | Irish descent. |
es, Newfoundland to a Roman Catholic family of | Irish descent. |
rity of immigrants were of French, German, and | Irish descent. |
an, Corocan, Courigan, Currigan) surname is of | Irish descent. |
The daughter of a bus inspector, she is of | Irish descent. |
aian descent, and her mother, Mary, a nurse of | Irish descent. |
were Croatian immigrants and her mother was of | Irish descent. |
He is of German and | Irish descent. |
ell Christie (Linford's brother) and Diana, of | Irish descent. |
was born in Halifax, the son of John Keefe, of | Irish descent. |
The family was originally of | Irish descent. |
Decorative spearhead of | Irish design |
tyle Award" which as a prize placed her in the | Irish Design Centre, a retail outlet for top-end Iri |
Bromhead was considered to be | Irish, despite being born in Versailles, France. |
He was then called up to the | Irish development tour to New Zealand in 1997. |
the only place outside Europe to have its own | Irish dialect. |
The Gaelic areas spoke | Irish dialects. |
, 'All the Bishops' Men - Clerical Abuse in an | Irish Diocese, Collins Press |
d (January 16, 1904 - December 4, 1985) was an | Irish diplomat, who served as ambassador to Britain |
David J. Cooney (born 29 April 1954) is an | Irish diplomat. |
On leaving college he became an | Irish diplomat. |
2010: Route | Irish, directed by Ken Loach. |
ernan (born 1 July 1965) is a retired Northern | Irish discus thrower. |
h prelates were against a legal toleration for | Irish dissent. |
The Royal | Irish Distilleries were built by Dunville in 1869. |
Irish Distillers is a subsidiary of the French drink | |
This gave | Irish Distillers control over all whiskey production |
The New Midleton Distillery built by | Irish Distillers now produces most of the Irish whis |
Irish Distillers' Midleton distillery has been part | |
d-Ricard successfully bid for ownership of the | Irish Distillers. |
in 1944/45, the story focuses on an apolitical | Irish district nurse, Pauline. |
It was the first of the | Irish Division to take the field and was the most tr |
formed had been the previously mentioned 16th ( | Irish) Division - mainly Roman Catholics from the Ir |
on with the 6th Division, 24th Division, 16th ( | Irish) Division and the 29th Division. |
Willie Redmond was the 'Grand Old Man of the | Irish Division' and the most typical representative |
The 7th Battalion with the 16th ( | Irish) Division. |
on served with the 27th Division and the 10th ( | Irish) Division. |
Inertia, an | Irish DJ duo, the pairing of John O'Callaghan and Ne |
Colony is an | Irish documentary film directed by Carter Gunn and R |
Derrytrasna (from | Irish: Doire Trasna) is a small village and townland |
Derrinturn ( | Irish: Doire an tSoirn) is a village in County Kilda |
n 1932 and plays in the Second division of the | Irish domestic club competition the Allied Irish Ban |
d John Harrington (born 1927 in Ireland) is an | Irish Dominican priest. |
A Murderous Circus is the third album by | Irish doom metal band Mourning Beloveth. |
rdress Lloyd was commissioned in the 4th Royal | Irish Dragoon Guards on 10 October 1894. |
George Farquhar, renowned | Irish dramatist |
In the 1890s, he became a friend of the noted | Irish dramatist and homosexual Oscar Wilde. |
George Farquhar (1677 - 29 April 1707) was an | Irish dramatist. |
For the | Irish drinking holiday see Arthur's Day |
Another | Irish Drinking Song |
Eslinbridge ( | Irish: Droichead na hEislinne) is a village in Count |
Drumone ( | Irish: Droim Eamhna) is a village in western County |
Drumcong ( | Irish: Droim Conga, meaning "narrow ridge") is a vil |
Dromod ( | Irish: Dromad) is a village in County Leitrim, Irela |
Dooish (from | Irish: Dubhais) is a village and townland near Drumq |
ent, Lord Delvin (1742 - 6 August 1761) was an | Irish duellist and Member of Parliament. |
The hill gives its name to an | Irish earldom. |
twentieth century in the years leading to the | Irish Easter Rising, it tells the stories of the Iri |
y Modern Ireland : an appraisal appraised', in | Irish Economic & Social History, IV (1977), pp. |
Sean Declan Conrad Barrett is an | Irish economist and politician. |
Brendan Halligan (born 5 July 1936) is an | Irish economist and a former Labour Party politician |
Gorman (17 June 1923 - 12 January 2003) was an | Irish economist and academic. |
Eithne FitzGerald (born in 1950) is an | Irish economist and former Labour Party politician. |
In 1978 the | Irish economy recorded the biggest deficit for an ad |
anagh (23 June 1860 - 26 February 1891) was an | Irish editor, writer and poet. |
The | Irish Education Experiment. |
Recent Reforms in | Irish Education, (1902) |
Turkish | Irish Educational and Cultural Society (TIECS), aims |
Inagh ( | Irish: Eidhneach, meaning "ivy in irish") is a villa |
Dr Ada (Adeline) English ( | Irish: Eithne Inglis; 10 January 1875-27 January 194 |
od introduced by the 1919 Act is still used in | Irish elections today. |
The total number of the | Irish electorate eligible to vote in election was 3, |
For the | Irish electro band, see Zombie Computer (Band). |
He is chairman of the | Irish Electro-Acoustic Music Association. |
Irish Elite League (1): 2008 | |
They play in the | Irish Elite League. |
Magan was interned in the Curragh during the | Irish Emergency (during the Second World War). |
17 January 1856 he married Margaret Hayes, an | Irish emigrant girl. |
rick was born in Chester County, the son of an | Irish emigrant. |
He was the son of | Irish emigrants and attended Finchley Catholic Gramm |
the 1780s, Tilting evolved into an exclusively | Irish enclave, beginning with the first visitors fro |
first screw-pile lighthouse was built by blind | Irish engineer Alexander Mitchell. |
Charles Gerald McNamara (born 1900) was an | Irish engineer active throughout mid-twentieth-centu |
April 13 - Alexander Mitchell, | Irish engineer and inventor of the screw-pile lighth |
e graduated in Celtic Studies and is fluent in | Irish, English and German. |
Thomas Burke (1749 - 31 December 1815) was an | Irish engraver and painter. |
November 21 - Alexander Henry Haliday, | Irish entomologist (d. |
For the | Irish entrepreneur, see Denis O'Donnell. |
He conducted five winning | Irish entries, in 1980, 1987, 1992, 1993, and 1996. |
anied 29 Eurovision songs, among which 24 were | Irish entries. |
Roberts was the | Irish entry to the Eurovision Song Contest 1997 in D |
"Horoscopes" was the | Irish entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1981, per |
John Gibbons is an | Irish environmental campaigner and the founder of th |
He served as | Irish envoy to South Africa and France in 1921 and 1 |
It was Macken's first time on an | Irish equestrian team in more than a decade. |
Niall Griffin (born 1977) is an | Irish equestrian. |
Austin O'Connor (born 1974) is an | Irish equestrian. |
Patricia Ryan (born 1973) is an | Irish equestrian. |
Louise Lyons (born 1976) is an | Irish equestrian. |
The | Irish Equine Centre |
In 1971 he served as treasurer of the | Irish Esperantist Association. |
In 1810 he was employed on the | Irish estate of the marquess of Downshire. |
Calvert now turned his attention to his | Irish estates and his overseas investments. |
ticles relating to Ireland use the harp (as on | Irish Euro coins and Irish passports etc.)? |
g's performance was conducted by long-standing | Irish Eurovision conductor Noel Kelehan. |
n was falsely rumoured to be the talent behind | Irish Eurovision entry Dustin the Turkey. |
He writes a weekly column for the | Irish Examiner and one for the Irish edition of The |
He was the 2005 | Irish Examiner Young Rugby Player of the Year. |
arner currently writes a weekly column for the | Irish Examiner published every Monday. |
In 1706 he became Lord Chief Baron of the | Irish Exchequer and within a year was appointed Lord |
Irish exchequer created. | |
John Bysse, rose to become Chief Baron of the | Irish Exchequer under Charles II. |
In 1655 he was appointed Chief Baron of the | Irish Exchequer. |
an English judge who became Chief Baron of the | Irish Exchequer. |
Irish Executions | |
Stormont Castle, meeting place of the Northern | Irish Executive |
ased on the notion of Locke returning from his | Irish exile to complete an old love affair, and save |
ation continued to recruit from the Wild Geese | Irish exile community. |
rmans were going to land where the British and | Irish expected them to, they would have been engaged |
He was a commander in the king's Welsh and | Irish expeditions of 1210-1212. |
Hachey, Thomas E., The | Irish Experience, A Concise History. |
Irish Exporters Association; | |
Irish Exporters Association | |
He is from Yorkshire, of | Irish extraction. |
"When | Irish Eyes Are Smiling" |
And When | Irish Eyes Are Smiling, sure, they steal your heart |
60 Seconds To Get Out: When | Irish Eyes Are Smiling / Too Ra Loo Ra Loo Ral (That |
"When | Irish Eyes Are Smiling" (Chauncey Olcott, George Gra |
"Smiling | Irish Eyes" |
Aided by a grant from the | Irish FA, the Co. |
osiah Hort's daughters married into well known | Irish families of that day and not many years after |
genealogical records and pedigree relating to | Irish families, and to maintain the register of memb |
half of the 20th century, it was home to many | Irish families. |
the Carmelite Abbey, Loughrea", Journal of the | Irish Family History Society, pp. |
'Hara was born in Toronto, Ontario, in a large | Irish family, and was raised Roman Catholic. |
From a staunchly Catholic New York | Irish family, his grandfather, John Mitchel, was a Y |
Lord Charlemont was born in London to an | Irish family, son of the Hon. |
rn in Brookline, Massachusetts to an immigrant | Irish family. |
as born in Carnegie, Pennsylvania into a large | Irish family. |
was born in Dublin, Ireland into a prosperous | Irish family. |
He was of Australian birth though from an old | Irish family. |
He is on the Founder's Committee of the Boston | Irish Famine Memorial. |
de Bary, the disease which led to the Great | Irish Famine |
The | Irish famine of 1879 was the last main Irish famine. |
to immigration and poverty at the time of the | Irish Famine |
Black Potatoes: The Story of the Great | Irish Famine, 1845 to 1850 (2001) |
e song is a fight song for Notre Dame Fighting | Irish fans. |
He was the grandfather of the | Irish fantasy artist Jim Fitzpatrick. |
Their restaurant serves authentic | Irish fare and signature dishes: Guinness Beef Stew, |
Enzo Santaniello - | Irish farm boy |
(February 20, 1965 - February 22, 2007) was an | Irish fashion designer. |
She lived in Paris with her | Irish father and French mother. |
Jim Dowd grew up in Lewisham, London, with an | Irish father and German mother. |
Jon Lane was one of twlve children born of an | Irish father and Hawaiian mother. |
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