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单词 Irish
释义

Definition of Irish in English:

Irish

adjective ˈʌɪrɪʃˈaɪrɪʃ
  • 1Relating to Ireland, its people, or the Celtic language traditionally and historically spoken there.

    (与)爱尔兰(有关)的;(与)爱尔兰人(有关)的;(与)古凯尔特语(有关)的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Either way, all Irish people spoken to yesterday were affected in some way by the atrocities.
    • He rattled the unions and disturbed the complacency that envelops Irish education.
    • You can call time on an old Irish tradition, apparently, but without new voices some things will never change.
    • He occasionally hints that the Irish state might have been a bit less troubled if only women had been given a larger role.
    • This is likely why the Irish response to immigration has been so conflicted thus far.
    • After war ended in November 1918, the Irish question was to rear its head again.
    • The proceeds raised will be directed through the Irish aid agencies towards relief work in Sri Lanka.
    • The Irish criticism of the British position is not as strong as that of other countries.
    • The mayor say he will commission a separate study into the needs of Lewisham's Irish community.
    • The news has been greeted with predictable dismay by the Irish branch of the Eurovision body.
    • I would assume that this means that there is no direct threat to any Irish jobs.
    • Negotiation and mediation seems to be solving the Irish question albeit very slowly.
    • When Clayton is first introduced he is a slightly creepy, effete cowboy with a pronounced Irish accent.
    • Clearly the provisions of the Irish orders do relate to parental responsibility.
    • As the long delay makes plain, in the king's eyes there were matters much more urgent than the Irish question.
    • Even more urgent was the need to find a response to Irish demands for independence.
    • Initial reports suggest it was a nail bomb, and that there is no apparent link with any Irish terrorist group.
    • Did the Irish pizza industry develop in response to the potato famine?
    • It is in the early stages of proceedings and has been communicated to the Irish government.
    • Critics and reviewers previously found ways to praise Irish films while the general public ignored them.
    1. 1.1offensive (of a statement or action) paradoxical; illogical or apparently so.
      〈冒犯〉(陈述,举动)荒谬的;(显然)不合逻辑的,(显然)不合理的
noun ˈʌɪrɪʃˈaɪrɪʃ
mass noun
  • 1The Celtic language of Ireland.

    (爱尔兰的)凯尔特语

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Such an arrangement would address the practical modalities of translation for Irish.
    • Please contact a Program Coordinator for the schedule of the next Irish Gaelic course.
    • But why did the Nazi radio bosses in Berlin bother to put out programmes in Irish at all?
    • British ambassador to Ireland Stewart Eldon is not averse to speaking a few words of Irish.
    • For the first year the column was mainly in Irish, but it drifted into English and continued thus exclusively.
    • Irish is known as Irish, Gaelic or Irish Gaelic in English.
    • The Gaelic notes in the Book of Deer were penned by a scribe whose native language was Irish.
    • The language is sometimes referred to as Gaelic, Irish Gaelic, or Erse, but in Ireland it is simply called Irish.
    • Higher maths was good and the sciences and the languages, Irish especially was very good.
    • The native language of Ireland is Irish Gaelic.
    • Irish is quite a different language and we require key documents translated into Irish.
    • There are also newspapers and websites exclusively in Irish Gaelic.
    • Microsoft Office programmes such as Word and Excel will also be translated into Irish.
    • Cathal writes in Irish but read the translations in English as well as the original in Irish.
    • Who should I speak with if I was thinking of translating the book into Irish?
    • The Book of Common Prayer was first translated into Irish Gaelic in 1608, and has gone through several editions and printings since then.
    • She was a fluent Irish speaker and she also taught Irish in St Paul's in Monasterevin.
    • Irish Gaelic has been in decline since the 1840's but progress in recent decades has ensured that it will continue as a living language for many years to come
    • Irish, also known as Irish Gaelic or Gaelige, is spoken today by approximately one million people worldwide.
    • He said he thought Irish was a great language and had great commitment to it.
  • 2as plural noun the IrishThe people of Ireland; Irish people collectively.

    爱尔兰人;爱尔兰民族

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Traditionally, the British are great actors, as are the Scottish and the Irish.
    • There was a revolt by women for the vote, by the Irish for independence and, above all, by workers.
    • It's not the first time he's abused freedom of speech for racist purposes - ask the Irish.
    • Cromwell was deeply influenced by the conduct of the Irish in the Ulster rebellion of 1641.
    • Those working with elderly Irish in need in Britain say the funding is woefully inadequate.
    • A similar strategy was also employed against England's other national enemy, the Irish.
    • Grey was recalled after two years, charged with cruel and dishonourable conduct against the Irish.
    • The Irish Post reflects the lives of and is the voice of the Irish in Britain.
    • The ball stays in the Aussie forward line except for a brief foray forward by the Irish.
    • If any group of white ethnics should have a sense of what it is to be an outsider and underdog, it should be the Irish.
    • Could there be a more compelling symbol of the almost spiritual place sport holds for the Irish?
    • It was a sequence of results that was very much out of context for the Irish.
    • The Victorian idea of the Irish was racist and put the Irish at the bottom of the evolutionary pyramid.
    • It also aided their hopes of assimilating the Irish in Scottish society and extending their own influence.
    • Our fourth game was that exciting single-point loss at home to the Irish.
    • Williams watched his side beaten well by the Irish on Saturday and admits there is a huge gulf between the teams.
    • Dense fog followed by weeks of heavy and persistent rain made this one of the worst summers on record for the Irish.
    • The next few weeks and months will be interesting as all eyes will be on the Irish.
    • Banning people from licensed premises is what the English used to do to the Irish.
    • His defeat of King Ædan at Degsastan in 603 effectively subdued the Irish in Scotland.

Irish is now spoken regularly only in a few isolated areas in the west of Ireland, having elsewhere been displaced by English. It is, however, the first official language of the Republic of Ireland and is taught in all state schools. Scottish Gaelic was descended from it

Derivatives

  • Irishness

  • noun
    • John Hume's brain wave of issuing a certificate of Irishness to the millions of people around the world who claim Irish descent - at a price of course - is pretty ingenious.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • And, in this regard, Harry believed that his Irishness was a help in befriending the Nigerians as it did not carry with it the colonial baggage of the former rulers.
      • The fact that ‘we’ were in their country for a few hundred years might be considered a good reason to be thoroughly well acquainted with ‘what Irishness is’.
      • The text, with is interlinear drawings and decorated initials composed of human and animal figures, has become emblematic of Ireland and Irishness.
      • Their expression of Irishness is getting drunk on St. Patricks day and having some weird desire to support Notre Dame football team.

Origin

Middle English: from Old English Īr- (stem of Īras 'the Irish' and Īrland 'Ireland', obscurely related to Hibernian) + -ish1.

Definition of Irish in US English:

Irish

adjectiveˈīriSHˈaɪrɪʃ
  • Relating to Ireland, its people, or the Goidelic language traditionally and historically spoken there.

    (与)爱尔兰(有关)的;(与)爱尔兰人(有关)的;(与)古凯尔特语(有关)的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • When Clayton is first introduced he is a slightly creepy, effete cowboy with a pronounced Irish accent.
    • Initial reports suggest it was a nail bomb, and that there is no apparent link with any Irish terrorist group.
    • Even more urgent was the need to find a response to Irish demands for independence.
    • It is in the early stages of proceedings and has been communicated to the Irish government.
    • I would assume that this means that there is no direct threat to any Irish jobs.
    • You can call time on an old Irish tradition, apparently, but without new voices some things will never change.
    • As the long delay makes plain, in the king's eyes there were matters much more urgent than the Irish question.
    • Critics and reviewers previously found ways to praise Irish films while the general public ignored them.
    • He occasionally hints that the Irish state might have been a bit less troubled if only women had been given a larger role.
    • Either way, all Irish people spoken to yesterday were affected in some way by the atrocities.
    • The news has been greeted with predictable dismay by the Irish branch of the Eurovision body.
    • Did the Irish pizza industry develop in response to the potato famine?
    • The mayor say he will commission a separate study into the needs of Lewisham's Irish community.
    • Negotiation and mediation seems to be solving the Irish question albeit very slowly.
    • The Irish criticism of the British position is not as strong as that of other countries.
    • After war ended in November 1918, the Irish question was to rear its head again.
    • The proceeds raised will be directed through the Irish aid agencies towards relief work in Sri Lanka.
    • He rattled the unions and disturbed the complacency that envelops Irish education.
    • This is likely why the Irish response to immigration has been so conflicted thus far.
    • Clearly the provisions of the Irish orders do relate to parental responsibility.
nounˈīriSHˈaɪrɪʃ
  • 1The Goidelic language that is the first official language of the Republic of Ireland.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Who should I speak with if I was thinking of translating the book into Irish?
    • British ambassador to Ireland Stewart Eldon is not averse to speaking a few words of Irish.
    • For the first year the column was mainly in Irish, but it drifted into English and continued thus exclusively.
    • Irish is known as Irish, Gaelic or Irish Gaelic in English.
    • Cathal writes in Irish but read the translations in English as well as the original in Irish.
    • He said he thought Irish was a great language and had great commitment to it.
    • But why did the Nazi radio bosses in Berlin bother to put out programmes in Irish at all?
    • She was a fluent Irish speaker and she also taught Irish in St Paul's in Monasterevin.
    • Irish, also known as Irish Gaelic or Gaelige, is spoken today by approximately one million people worldwide.
    • The native language of Ireland is Irish Gaelic.
    • Microsoft Office programmes such as Word and Excel will also be translated into Irish.
    • The language is sometimes referred to as Gaelic, Irish Gaelic, or Erse, but in Ireland it is simply called Irish.
    • Please contact a Program Coordinator for the schedule of the next Irish Gaelic course.
    • The Gaelic notes in the Book of Deer were penned by a scribe whose native language was Irish.
    • There are also newspapers and websites exclusively in Irish Gaelic.
    • Irish is quite a different language and we require key documents translated into Irish.
    • Irish Gaelic has been in decline since the 1840's but progress in recent decades has ensured that it will continue as a living language for many years to come
    • Such an arrangement would address the practical modalities of translation for Irish.
    • Higher maths was good and the sciences and the languages, Irish especially was very good.
    • The Book of Common Prayer was first translated into Irish Gaelic in 1608, and has gone through several editions and printings since then.
  • 2as plural noun the IrishThe people of Ireland; Irish people collectively.

    爱尔兰人;爱尔兰民族

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Our fourth game was that exciting single-point loss at home to the Irish.
    • The Irish Post reflects the lives of and is the voice of the Irish in Britain.
    • It's not the first time he's abused freedom of speech for racist purposes - ask the Irish.
    • Banning people from licensed premises is what the English used to do to the Irish.
    • The next few weeks and months will be interesting as all eyes will be on the Irish.
    • Grey was recalled after two years, charged with cruel and dishonourable conduct against the Irish.
    • Cromwell was deeply influenced by the conduct of the Irish in the Ulster rebellion of 1641.
    • Williams watched his side beaten well by the Irish on Saturday and admits there is a huge gulf between the teams.
    • There was a revolt by women for the vote, by the Irish for independence and, above all, by workers.
    • It also aided their hopes of assimilating the Irish in Scottish society and extending their own influence.
    • Those working with elderly Irish in need in Britain say the funding is woefully inadequate.
    • A similar strategy was also employed against England's other national enemy, the Irish.
    • The Victorian idea of the Irish was racist and put the Irish at the bottom of the evolutionary pyramid.
    • Could there be a more compelling symbol of the almost spiritual place sport holds for the Irish?
    • It was a sequence of results that was very much out of context for the Irish.
    • Dense fog followed by weeks of heavy and persistent rain made this one of the worst summers on record for the Irish.
    • His defeat of King Ædan at Degsastan in 603 effectively subdued the Irish in Scotland.
    • If any group of white ethnics should have a sense of what it is to be an outsider and underdog, it should be the Irish.
    • The ball stays in the Aussie forward line except for a brief foray forward by the Irish.
    • Traditionally, the British are great actors, as are the Scottish and the Irish.

Phrases

  • get one's Irish up

    • Cause one to become angry.

      if someone tries to make me do something I don't want to do, it gets my Irish up
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It takes a lot to get my Irish up but up it is.
      • Fortunately or unfortunately, I got his Irish up when I compared his behavior to the tobacco company executives swearing that they had no idea that nicotine was addictive.
      • Well in that case, here's something that might get your Irish up.
      • Early in my blogging career I used to get my Irish up too much.
      • Just a few days before St. Patrick's Day, a Vermont woman got her Irish up before the state supreme court over her right to include the word ‘Irish’ on her license plate.
      • I got my Irish up to fight back; fortunately, someone was holding me back, laughing.
      • What gets my Irish up about all this of course is how he was attacked when he died.
      • When someone shouted, ‘Jimmy got his Irish up,’ everyone knew that trouble was just around the corner.
      • Yes, Big Bill has managed to really get my Irish up a couple of times over the course of the past six months or so.
      • It was at this point that Higgins got his Irish up then took aim at the referee's solar plexus with a right jab.

Origin

Middle English: from Old English Īr- (stem of Īras ‘the Irish’ and Īrland ‘Ireland’, obscurely related to Hibernian)+ -ish.

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更新时间:2024/10/19 12:47:43