Children of all ages from toddlers to octogenarians came to pay tribute to one of the true heroes of Irish sport. |
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Chowder should be made rich and thick, served with doorstop slices of home-made brown bread and Irish butter. |
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A tall, handsome woman with the colouring and cheekbones of her Irish engineer father, Murphy exudes both strength and sensitivity. |
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The Irish spade also performs beautifully in tight spaces or in heavy clay or rocky soils. |
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Her Scottish accent is absolutely terrible, veering alarmingly between Australian, Irish and Robin Williams in Mrs Doubtfire. |
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The punter took odds of 20-1 on Irish horse Davids Lad for next month's race at Aintree. |
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The current crop is short on caps and confidence, with many areas of weakness for the Irish to exploit. |
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All in all, he proved a capable Chairman, handling staff on both sides of the Irish Sea with aplomb. |
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Despite the drizzly rain the 23 year old beauty looked amazing, wrapped in a red cape made by Irish designer Ciaran Sweeney. |
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As his name suggests, if you go back three or four generations, Dundee has both Scottish and Irish blood coursing through his veins. |
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Duvillaun is one of the largest islands off the Irish coast and is renowned as a wildlife haven. |
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The Irish Deaf Society says less than a tenth of all Irish broadcasting is subtitled, with these stations being the worst offenders. |
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And the winning Irish trainer Jimmy Mangan admitted the horse could line up again for the world-famous steeplechase again next year. |
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In Russian velarized stops contrast with palatalized ones, and velarization is also contrastive in Irish. |
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Amongst his rivals is the great enigma of Irish steeplechasing, Florida Pearl. |
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In Titanic, virtually every Englishman was insufferable, while happy Irish fiddlers and dancers created a wonderful atmosphere in steerage. |
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He prefers the Irish spade, with its longer, narrower blade, to English and American models. |
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It is silent running and produces zero emissions and was officially launched on to the Irish market last month. |
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In the past year, Irish police have adopted a tougher approach to pubs and off-licences that sell drink to teens. |
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He has carried on playing his music off-screen, appearing on Top of the Pops in 1994 with the Irish band the Pogues. |
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If you like standard contemporary Irish folk sung by a lilting soprano, here you go. |
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He enjoys books about boxing heroes, Irish and English history, philosophy and political history. |
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He continued to write operettas and finally realised his long-standing intention, to compose an Irish operetta. |
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Two hours of original script and music catapult the audience through the very best and freshest Northern Irish exportable wit. |
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But why are all prices charged in sterling on an Irish airline, even on flights between two eurozone countries? |
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Some of the Irish money was converted into sterling and is believed to have been smuggled back into the country, the sources said. |
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Visitors from the Republic pay the standard brochure rate in Irish pounds even though the price is quoted in sterling. |
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There will also be a rental scheme in operation for owners, a fact which may spark a good deal of Irish investor interest. |
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Irish painter O'Conor, whose work has often been compared with that of Monet's, was an old boy of Ampleforth School, in North Yorkshire. |
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Her generation of Irish people knew all about sacrifice and were a noble people with a fine sense of community and idealism. |
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Reintroducing college fees could harm the prospects of improved access to third level education, the head of Irish universities has warned. |
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The structure of Old Irish, says Professor Watkins, can be compared only with that of Vedic Sanskrit or Hittite of the Old Kingdom. |
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Reyes has his whole family here, and Fabregas, rather charmingly, lives in old-school digs with an Irish landlady. |
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Earlier this week, the actress was mistaken for Irish singer Sinead O'Connor after lopping off her brunette bob. |
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Approximately 80 officers and soldiers from 3 Royal Irish and 120 old soldiers escorted the three UDR colours on parade for the last time. |
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Irish harpers used their fingernails on the wire strings of their harps, again probably near the soundboard. |
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True to the tradition of real Irish music, we would be standing around a fire listening to a harper or singing in gaelic. |
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If Mary gets the nod from the Irish selectors it will be her first Senior international and a wonderful achievement for this young athlete. |
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The Irish father is a brute of a colonial policeman who, when not violating his child, enjoys casually smacking her in the mouth. |
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His profile in the company's annual report omits to mention that he was chairman of National Irish Bank. |
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Irish monks also found a different use for the alembic stills that had been used to make perfume in the Middle East since the fourth century. |
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There were wild celebrations among the Irish players and their noisy army of fans. |
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This involved in particular the Basques, the Bretons, the Galicians, the Catalans, the Occitanians, the Welsh and the the Irish. |
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Fans of Oscar Wilde will recall that the verdantly carnationed Irish writer met his downfall over allegations that he had kissed a certain boy. |
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These include Faroese, Modern Hebrew, Irish, Upper Sorbian, Urdu, and Welsh. |
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European bourses ended the week in the red yesterday, but the Irish market bucked the trend managing to stay ahead throughout the day's trading. |
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Star exhibit at Caxton Prints will be a set of twelve stipple engravings depicting the progress of the Irish linen manufacture. |
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There's usually a special on this radio station my dad listens to and on Sundays, for an hour, they play Irish music. |
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The company has few friends left in the Irish fourth estate after herding journalists around its new European headquarters in Dublin last week. |
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As he said, a name like that was obviously of Irish stock, possibly even of Cork descent, so the film was included with Irish shorts. |
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Under the terms of the deal, FMI will represent more than 500 Irish producers whose products are stocked in the British retailer's Irish stores. |
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Not long ago, technology recruitment was one of the most active, and profitable, specialist areas within the Irish recruitment market. |
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A larger than usual number of Irish labourers presented themselves at Skipton market for the annual haymaking engagement. |
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I did have the distinct advantage of having on-site Irish cousins, though I had never met them. |
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It is also used by a number of exporters in the Irish livestock industry who ship cattle on the hoof to Lebanon, Egypt and Europe. |
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The Korean Irish Memorial Committee are determined to set up a memorial stone to commemorate the 28 Irishmen that were killed in Korea. |
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A beautiful stone circle looking out onto the Irish Sea on the west and the Cumbrian mountains to the east. |
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He overcame a mistake at the last fence of the 2002 Irish Grand National to beat the opposition. |
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Jim had a special rapport with Irish people and his popularity has remained incredibly strong over the years. |
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The Irish champion walker was travelling in a car which was involved in a head-on collision with a lorry. |
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The Irish players within that group oozed a quality you were always looking up to. |
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Smokers crossing the Irish Sea could find themselves banished to the open decks of all ferries to and from the Republic. |
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Not bad for a man whose position on the political spectrum is roughly a million miles left to that of the average Irish voter. |
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Eight pall bearers from the Irish Guards lifted it from the gun-carriage and carried it slowly to the catafalque. |
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This year the Irish stop-off brought some of Europe's top sailors to West Kerry. |
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Irish residents can use the card to get treatment in the public health service of any EU country. |
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I had made my escape from Alcatraz, survived the storm-tossed Irish sea, and was back in civilisation, or a decent approximation thereof. |
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When the likes of Waterford Port were thriving, most Irish fishermen were going around in cast-off boats from other countries. |
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So how many shares will the institutional investors in the Irish market actual want to buy on the open market? |
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One researcher thinks that didgeridoo may be an Irish coinage, a nonce word like boogaloo or dingaling. |
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Apart from a short spell in the opening half, Ireland never looked like scoring a try, where as the English crossed the Irish line five times. |
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The Irish recognised that this was said in the heat of the moment and accepted the apology which came via the Scottish Rugby Union. |
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Even some of the youngest of today's Irish performers are left spellbound by his music. |
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However, there is no standard charge for this service and it can be as little as a few euros in the case of certain Irish banks. |
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I could understand the Irish boys being a bit peed off after things Dermot said, but that is in the past. |
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Mick seems typical of those noble people, the ethnic Irish in Britain, who retain a love of Ireland and face life's vicissitudes with a smile. |
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Adverse effects of high consumption levels, however, lead to Irish people falling victim to more accidents and violence, new research shows. |
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The Irish Georgian Society will advise on Georgian and Victorian properties. |
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Irish Toryism was the dominant political creed down to 1859, at least in terms of Westminster seats. |
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The Irish Setter has evolved from the crossing of Irish Water Spaniels, Springer Spaniels, the Spanish Pointer, and English and Gordon Setters. |
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As an Irish taxpayer, I subsidise that support structure while new moms who work beside me cannot get State help for child support. |
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I think that this ability to enjoy life is one of the shared characteristics of Bulgarians and the Irish. |
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Joseph Cooper Walker's Historical Memoirs of the Irish Bards was the first major literary outcome of the influence of Celticism in Ireland. |
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It's the final morning and so in celebration we order the full Irish Breakfast from the comfort of our bed. |
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The highlight of the event was the Benefit dance in the Irish Social Club, West Roxbury, Boston, which was a terrific success. |
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They climb over each other, snatching spaghetti, Irish stew and bully beef from the air and each other. |
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Earlier this month there was a row over the Irish Independent spiking a story about Dunnes Stores. |
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The figures were supplied to The Sunday Business Post by Bupa, the Irish subsidiary of British health insurer Bupa. |
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This is one of only two dates she is playing in Ireland as part of her British and Irish tour. |
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It followed an ultimatum from the British that the Irish agree to their terms or face the renewal of war. |
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Destined to remain boyish in looks for his whole life, he gives his best shot at a bumfluff beard and an Irish accent and he hangs in there. |
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All around us people yelled in Spanish, German, French, Russian, Italian, British English, American English, Irish English etc. |
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Hope goes before Irish rugby performances as well as raw garlic before a date or beef vindaloo before a ten-mile run. |
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All in all it was a great return for Roy and totally vindicated Brian Kerr's determination to get him back in an Irish shirt. |
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In an interview with an Irish Sunday newspaper, Denise recalled the bumpy 30 mile journey in the ambulance. |
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He wore a string vest, had upper and lower arm tattoos, a thick gold chain and Irish accent. |
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Combine viruses with the scourge of spam and you have two heavy anchors dragging down Irish productivity. |
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None of them reported that they had relaxed their credit criteria in the face of the buoyancy in the Irish economy. |
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Way back in the 19th century there was this drunken sot of an Irish kid named Liam. |
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Somewhere between 432 and 460 a second visionary dream, in which the Irish people beseeched him to return, ignited his missionary zeal. |
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Irish vocal and production talent, much sought-after in Europe, barely gets a look in these days. |
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Cathal writes in Irish but read the translations in English as well as the original in Irish. |
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The pub is operating a bureau de change after realising dealing in euros and Irish pounds was too difficult. |
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The Bennigan's Irish menu will include a range of steaks, ribs, burgers, chicken and pork dishes. |
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The orientation of Burke's mind can be understood in terms of the Irish Enlightenment. |
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There were individual companies of French, Swedish and Germans as well as Irish and Vandemonians. |
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Irish supporters of the Burmese pro-democracy movement said they found out as they monitored the website last Thursday. |
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No one can have failed to notice the metamorphosis of the humble vitreous china sink in Irish bathrooms. |
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The lack of a strike force meant that Spain offered little in attack and the Irish pursuit of the winner continued relentlessly. |
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Senator Kennedy is extremely committed to the cause of the undocumented Irish and he is a very important ally for us. |
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A dawn flag-lowering ceremony, as the sun broke through on Tuesday morning, formally brought a chapter in Irish military history to a close. |
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However, one of the trustees of the pension fund at Irish Sugar insists that there is no immediate cause for concern. |
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Mr Quinlan, whose backers are mainly Irish high rollers, has approached the investment bank NM Rothschild. |
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And we wear the green caubeen and carry the pike, the distinctive headgear and weapon of the Irish warriors of old. |
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Refugees are frequently termed freeloaders and spongers by resentful Irish, even by certain politicians. |
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Whatever its origin, however, the caubeen had become accepted as being distinctively Irish by the early years of the Twentieth Century. |
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All sorts of music will be well represented at the festival, including concerts of Irish folk music, jazz, Parisian chansons and brass bands. |
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This is a critical problem for Irish cattle farmers who rely so much on grass silage. |
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The Irish possessed a strength of numbers, influence, and confidence beyond their fellow Irish in North America and elsewhere. |
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The increase in stamp duty to 9 per cent on non-residential property will weigh against investing in the Irish commercial property market. |
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Instead of the melodious tones of an Irish brogue, the exaggerated drawl of an angry young man spat from the earpiece. |
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The group is bullish on the prospects for the sports drink that has already captured 16 per cent of the Irish market. |
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He may have a Dublin brogue and a very Irish sense of humour, but Mark Geary has found his home, and Ireland is not it. |
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The Irish brogue became more pronounced as the voice became more panic-stricken. |
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Nevertheless, An Irish Working Class does offer some rewards to the efforts of non-specialist readers. |
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A significant proportion of the Irish population cannot afford non-standard dental treatment in Ireland. |
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It is imperative that the Irish and EU Governments introduce legislation and support services for these very vulnerable women. |
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The slowdown in the commercial property market in Ireland may lead to vulture funds looking to obtain short-term value in the Irish market. |
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Higgins, a small stout woman who usually speaks in a booming Irish brogue, nods silently. |
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A hitman who asks no questions and creates no trouble, Michael Sullivan is a loyal henchman to ageing Irish mobster John Rooney. |
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Since then discussions have taken place leading to the agreement of a follow-on sale of the Irish business to the management buy-in team. |
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The attacker is described as white, with an Irish accent, streaky hair, which is possibly grey, and face stubble. |
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This Irish trio created a buzz across the pond in 2000 with their self-titled debut. |
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Stock markets will break their three-year losing streak, but the recovery will be unspectacular, Irish business leaders said. |
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Meanwhile in the town square the crowds were being entertained with Irish music and dancing. |
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Athelstan achieved a decisive victory for Wessex at Brunanburgh in 937, when a coalition of Irish, Norse, Scots and Northumbrians were defeated. |
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Irish employers can now hire anyone from the new countries, and many are willing to work for less than their Irish counterparts. |
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He was never going to be happy on a surface that resembled a bog in places but he was the second Irish finisher in the junior event. |
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In particular, he wishes to restore the history of Irish womanhood to its proper place. |
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The Irish education system is noted for its high rates of participation and the high value society places on it. |
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Designed in Ireland for the Irish market, it caters for all the Irish Vat schemes and is euro-compliant. |
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The first objective, newsy article on blogging I've seen in a mainstream paper comes from The Irish Times. |
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Their annual report will need to address Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish issues. |
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A whole school of Northern Irish painters found inspiration amongst the beautiful Glens of Antrim. |
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Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish ministers have agreed to give nurses the full increase recommended by the independent pay review body. |
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Our degree is a recognised law degree for the purposes of the Northern Irish Bar and the English Bar. |
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She saw him turn to a Lord near him, his Irish brogue fainter than it had been years before due to years of tutoring under English professors. |
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The Northern Irish construction company has been awarded a multimillion pound contract. |
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Several witnesses related the story of that operation, usually with an Irish brogue to enhance the color of Madden's bravado. |
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The students went to a Northern Irish police service station where they spoke with police officers. |
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Production aimed for the Irish market currently amounts to 724,782 hectolitres in cans and 277,317 hectolitres in bottles. |
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Northern Irish technology firms lack the support structures and industry network. |
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The Northern Irish seemed to make a long term change to themselves as a community. |
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The Northern Irish were not lacking confidence considering their last victory came against Malta 17 months ago. |
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Food customs of the Northern Irish are not really different from the practices of the Irish. |
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Still, even while driving in and out of Irish potholes, you'll hear no squeak or feel no squirm from the structure or fittings. |
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Irish naval service Commander Gerard O'Flynn said yesterday that north-west gales, which had been rocking the vessel to and fro, had eased. |
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The trick for me has been to attempt to absorb Norway, not to be negative, to identify with Norwegians and Norway, yet not lose my Irish roots. |
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One Irish citizen found out what happens when you abuse the cabin crew of an airline. |
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Afterwards a few Irish players, most notably Duff, lamented the lost opportunity to earn three points. |
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I heard my mum on the other end, her Irish brogue more noticeable than when I had left. |
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Playing opposite the Irish actor Pierce Brosnan would undoubtedly be her biggest role yet. |
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For example, as he grew drunker in the final act, he began to slip back into the Irish brogue that he told us he had worked so hard to erase. |
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The Irish Sea has never been balmy, but the sheltered bay in Port Erin caught the sun and meant many happy summers spent frisking in the sand. |
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Irish rugby is about to get a brand new home, free, gratis and for nothing. |
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Despite the absence of Irish pubs and techno bars, we found the local nightlife impressive for such a small town. |
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In his last decade in Rome he lived in a home run by the Blue Nuns, an Irish order so called because of the color of their habit. |
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For the second week in a row a top Irish jockey was caught dropping his hands on a winning placed horse. |
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Each year of the music week the best of talent come on stage to perform, and some greats of Irish music always show up. |
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Starting as an assistant stage manager for the Irish Theatre Company, Conor quickly moved into acting with the Abbey and the Gate. |
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Cissandra may be her stage name but she is the bearer of the very Irish name of Sandra Rae Durkin back home in California. |
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Watch for an Irish outsider in the supreme novice hurdle and an Irish winner of the Coral Cup. |
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Of particular concern to Irish farmers are proposals to ban rests at staging posts, to reduce stocking densities and to alter journey times. |
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More than 200 Irish haemophiliacs were infected with HIV and Hepatitis C as a result, including young children. |
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After Epsom, the colt went on to win the Irish Derby and the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Diamond Stakes at Ascot. |
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Galileo also landed the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Diamond Stakes at Ascot and the Irish Derby. |
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Frankie Dettori urged Grandera to the narrowest of wins over Hawk Wing in the Group One Irish Champion Stakes at Leopardstown on Saturday. |
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This is based on references in Irish hagiography to belts having been preserved as relics of the saints who wore them. |
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Music was dear to her heart and Delia had a fondness for Irish music and the old songs and ballads. |
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These were the new readers the Irish Times had to attract in order to survive, and Gageby set out on a subtle course to achieve it. |
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No one in his senses now stall-feeds cattle in the Irish Free State with any expectation of profit from this transaction in itself. |
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The winner, ridden by Chris McCarron, caught the Irish horse in the run in and came out in front. |
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As well as his operatic numbers he includes among his repertoire a number of Irish songs. |
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He is the current holder of the Irish record for the highest score of 4,273 points in a tetrathlon. |
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The half-bred Connemara has a wicked sense of Irish humour and is almost more human than horse. |
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But perhaps the greatest beneficiary of all has been the Irish half-bred mare whose future in the mid-1900s looked extremely bleak. |
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Two brothers and a sister, big Irish family, you know, a lot of extended relatives and cousins, and now just a wonderful, idyllic upbringing. |
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Main standby offenders in Irish homes are TVs, video recorders, DVDs, video games, satellite decoders, stereo systems, PCs and microwave ovens. |
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London and the south-east of England continue to be the favoured destinations for Irish investors. |
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A sage once said that an Irish atheist is one who wishes to God he could believe in Him. |
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It was a tall order for Irish business to call a halt at such short notice and some annoyance was understandable. |
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Cabin crew were involved in a stand-up argument with the man in front of dozens of Irish holiday-makers. |
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About 35 Irish companies are active within the health, nutrition and functional food and drink sectors. |
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They won seven Mid Ulster titles, seven Ulster titles and three Irish championships. |
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British cartoons routinely depicted the Irish as anarchists, pigs, monkeys, apes, monsters, bog-trotters, and subhumans. |
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Our Irish challengers this year are good if not brilliant horses on what they've shown so far. |
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His camp, squeaking, self-absorbed, Irish puppydog charm worked its magic on the voting audience. |
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The wildlife watch event provides the group with a snapshot overview of cetacean activity around the Irish coast on a single day. |
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Several Irish talk show hosts have been filling the air waves with information about stuffing your dead pets. |
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The share price got hammered because Irish shareholders are net sellers in the long run. |
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They all made up part of a heaving 8,000 strong crowd at the first of two Irish gigs as parts of their Licks tour. |
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Boring mealtimes are set to be spiced up, as Irish designers produce statement pieces for the table that bring individuality to place settings. |
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She had been studying up on Irish wedding and engagement traditions for a while and she recognized this ring. |
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See if it changes your paltry lives in the slightest to send him packing back to his richly opiated Irish mistress! |
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Structurally, it is a south-westward extension of Scotland, separated by the North Channel of the Irish Sea. |
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In true Parisian style we saw the new year in in an Irish Bar in the Bastille. |
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Cllr McCarthy expressed the view that the Irish, Australians and Canadians were used as cannon fodder without a care. |
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Rome has long been a favourite holiday spot among the Irish and if you have deep pockets, you can acquire a unique apartment within spitting distance of the Colosseum. |
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Moreover, the positive side to Irish neutrality, our promotion of diplomatic settlements, our proud UN peacekeeping traditions, must be maintained. |
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While the British state, however reluctantly, was substantially increasing its involvement in Northern Ireland, the Irish government's approach was somnambulistic. |
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I was born and brought up here, the eldest son of Irish parents. |
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What is it about the Irish that we insist on taking to our bosoms musicians who, in any other country, would be considered B grade, jobbing songsters? |
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Work on the densely literary Essay on Irish Bulls sophisticated Edgeworth's approach, by requiring her to reflect on what a nation is when it is less than an autonomous state. |
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Instead of requiring the actor to disguise it, the director forces every other performer essaying a Greek or Macedonian role to have an Irish brogue. |
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Irish people speak English with an accent known as a brogue. |
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It seemed to be a mix between the English accent and the Irish brogue. |
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Irish houses, moreover, were now often built in close association with souterrains, stone-lined, underground passages, sometimes as much as 100 metres in length. |
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The figures were at variance with the Irish Hospitality Industry Alliance, which said up to 65,000 jobs would be lost if the blanket ban was introduced. |
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We jovially washed down the meal with a few nips of Irish Cream. |
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Yet, if tries were impossible to come by and this Irish side have still scored eight in the current championship there were some memorable moments in a bruising challenge. |
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The bubbly Italian can speak six languages including Spanish, French, Russian, Greek, and English, and now wants to learn to try her hand at learning Irish. |
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Mayo County Council will encourage the use of the Irish language and the use of native Irish spelling of place names in the naming of housing developments. |
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Thousands of young Irish faces beamed back at the Vicar of Christ. |
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The English hounds were high-legged, strong animals probably originating from the crossing of English mastiffs with Irish greyhounds and wolfhounds. |
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Sharman said the mostly Irish track crew, commanded by the colorful J. S. Casement, who carried pistols and, occasionally, a bullwhip, numbered about three hundred men. |
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Irish Ferries, if successful with their bully-boy tactics, will serve as a precedent for every unscrupulous employer to force down wages in a race to the bottom. |
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At present they are not charged for the spillover into the Irish market. |
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He later became a Vincentian, then Rector of the Irish College in Paris. |
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Our British headquarters is amazed at the buoyancy of the Irish market. |
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Phineas Finn by Anthony Trollope, the story of an Irish lawyer who more or less wanders into Parliament. |
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Other countries were also found to offer smaller class sizes to accommodate more attention for non-native pupils and to offer other supports not available in Irish schools. |
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There are more than 50 traditionally docked breeds recognised by the Kennel Club, including cocker spaniels, pointers, Irish terriers and vizslas. |
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His ornate and difficult vocabulary shows the influence of Irish models. |
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Behind the Irish coach, the camera pans over familiar ex-players all contributing, rather than administrators busily filling in their expenses slips. |
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Select from Italian, French, Indian, grill, Irish pubs, champagne bars and brasseries at the Viaduct, sports bars, vodka bars and a Brazilian restaurant on Princes Wharf. |
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No doubt, these differences will be patched up, and then, perhaps in a year's time, we the Irish people will be asked to vote on this Constitution. |
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Rather than seeing himself as a descendant of a long line of respected Irish playwrights, he claims his influences are film directors and V-sign flicking punks. |
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There are many more plants that will thrive in medium light, among them Irish moss, Tahitian bridal veil, heart-leaved philodendron, pitcher plant, and butterwort. |
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Roxanne suggests that perhaps it is the quietness of much Irish writing that makes it hard to market here. |
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I warned those near, Irish or Norse alike, to draw back and give us space. |
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After 1815, Highland Scots and the Northern Irish flocked to Canada. |
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My mother had a phone call from a man with a Northern Irish accent. |
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The Northern Irish driver becomes the eighth different race winner. |
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By referring to the notes we can learn that Davitt and Parnell were two Irish politicians of the time, and that a cachou was a popular cashew candy. |
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The three-page letter on Irish Provisional Government-headed notepaper is in remarkably good condition given that it was stored in a wallet for over three decades. |
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In winning the Irish Derby by a half-length, Alamshar handed stablemate and eventual Prix de l' Arc de Triomphe winner Dalakhani his lone career loss. |
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Allied Irish Bank also has a 23 per cent stakeholding in the venture. |
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Soothe dry skin irritations with chamomile, lavender, jasmine, elder flowers, red clover and herbs such as Irish moss, calendula, comfrey, marshmallow root and violets. |
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Jim McBride, chef de mission of the Irish team, tries to ensure the athletes know it is a numbers game without that message figuring too much in their preparations. |
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A standing joke among British and Irish racegoers is that the best method of picking the winner is to go for a French horse that you had never even heard of until a month ago. |
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In an age of magnificent oratory, he was revered among the Irish for rejecting the calumnies against them made by a prominent, bigoted English historian of the times. |
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I was having an interesting conversation with a girl but nobody had warned me that the her nymph-like looks were complemented by the Irish surname O'Maniac. |
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An avid newspaper man, his daily Irish Independent is part of his staple diet and he likes nothing better than to discuss the latest political situation. |
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Women 57's progress in Irish politics is still slow and halting. |
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Irish has as many features in common with non-Indo-European languages, especially with Hamito-Semitic languages, as with other Indo-European languages. |
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He goes on to explain that while the Irish milk market has remained relatively static in recent years, consumers' needs and wants for milk have changed quite dramatically. |
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The rising in Ulster, not Charles I nor the English House of Lords, was primarily responsible for these bills not reaching the Irish statute book. |
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However, the Irish needed the castle's large cannon for use in reducing other strongholds in the region, and were anxious to do so with the minimum delay. |
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One tonne of items such as swords, hatchets and entire canteens of cutlery have been confiscated from passengers departing Irish airports in just one month. |
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The Australian flag of course features the British union flag in the canton, a flag which signifies, intrinsically, the union of the English, Irish and Scottish nations. |
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He is the director of the Irish Council for Civil Liberties. |
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Smith, the Irish steeplechase champion, is improving every year and got his place on the Irish team, alongside Seamus Power and Peter Matthews, in the absence of Mark Carroll. |
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The increasing confidence of the Irish labour force means that employees are less inclined to tolerate biased, arbitrary or capricious employer decisions. |
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The hardbitten industrial area from Notre-Dame to the canal between de la Montagne and McGill got its name, Griffintown, from the Irish immigrants who once settled there. |
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The absolute prohibition on abortion won't wash with the Irish people because its implication for hard cases they can identify with frightens them. |
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Like the Ear Inn, this one-time Hell's Kitchen saloon was on the waterfront when it opened in 1868 to serve the local Irish stevedores and visiting seamen from the world over. |
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I know plenty of Italians, Spaniards, Irish, Serbs, Croatians, Greeks, Portuguese, French, and Russians who have black hair, dark eyes, and olive skin. |
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The running joke of The Last Roundup is that to be an Irish Everyman in the 20th century is to live an extraordinary life. |
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Thousands of Irish people are expected to fly to Rome next year for the canonisations of an Italian stigmatist, a South American Indian and the founder of Opus Dei. |
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Irish farmers hid their stills and kept on making moonshine. |
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Irish ideas had fed Carolingian notions of kingship, but the fully-fledged Carolingian royal ideology which played such a role in England was not retransmitted to Ireland. |
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Nowadays, this once controversial play is on the Irish school curriculum. |
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Although staff at the Crooked Billet are reluctant to expand on frightening details, they do not wholly refute the suggestion that an Irish woman haunts the cellars. |
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The men all had Irish accents and one was referred to Jon Jon. |
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Analysts and industry insiders accept that consolidation in stockbroking is inevitable as the Irish stock market loses more and more of its companies. |
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Irish wine consumers now buy over five million cases of wine a year. |
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It may be cold comfort for Irish policyholders who will lose up to 15 per cent of the value of their investments if they cash them in, but British policyholders are worse off. |
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The brewery has been exploring the idea since a think tank appointed by the Irish government recommended that low-alcohol versions of beers and stouts be introduced. |
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Cider represents a fourth Irish drink, one that is traditional, light and crisp, and appeals to drinkers who might not be interested in stouts, whiskeys, or cream liqueurs. |
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Back in Philadelphia, by 1836, a general strike led by Irish coal heavers succeeded in securing a working day lasting from 6am until 6pm, with two hours allowed for meals. |
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American political heavyweights and reclusive Hollywood stars will come together in New York next month to help two Irish men launch a new glossy magazine for dog lovers. |
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The Irish opt-out is therefore essentially meaningless because this tax will still hit people trying to travel into Ireland, including Irish people returning from abroad. |
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On 4 November 1833 Hamilton read a paper to the Royal Irish Academy expressing complex numbers as algebraic couples, or ordered pairs of real numbers. |
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But the Irish Water Safety Association, has urged the public to exercise due caution if contemplating a swim in the cold waters in the coming days. |
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The production and studio sound is excellent, the songs in Irish attractive, the string arrangements gorgeous and the instrumental dexterity often dazzling. |
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I had crab in avocado, with an apple mayonnaise for starter, then grilled mixed fish, followed by profiteroles, washed down with Orvieto and a couple of Irish coffees. |
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The 32-year-old, who has a Celtic cross on her left ankle and a shamrock on her left pelvic joint, got over her shyness as a youngster by taking Irish dancing classes. |
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Last year, Susan conducted a three week lecture tour in America to tell the story of Irish heraldry and genealogy and spoke in Boston, New York, Minneapolis and Chicago. |
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We live like the ancient Irish hermits, in separate hermitages, welcome retreatants, and go on the road periodically to give parish missions and retreats. |
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He said the live export trade is extremely important to Irish agriculture, particularly in terms of its key role in maintaining price competition and important market outlets. |
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The difficulties in the beef sector are directly attributable to the limited availability of market outlets, according to the Irish Meat Association. |
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Irish companies will get tax credit against their Irish tax liabilities to subsidise subcontracts from overseas, making them more competitive in tendering for the business. |
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But his interpretation of the latest figures as solely attributable to his policies was challenged by the opposition and by the Irish Refugee Council. |
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The former young driver of the year finalist still has an outside chance of the Irish title this season and will be pushing hard to continue his winning ways on home soil. |
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Competitors danced the Highland fling, the sword dance, the Highland reel, the sailor's hornpipe, the Irish Jig and other dances, preferably to the music of the bagpipe. |
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In December 1980 there was a high-level summit in Dublin between British and Irish ministers, and in 1981 a formal Anglo-Irish Intergovernmental Council was created. |
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It was in essence, for all Irish people, a period of high living. |
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Named after the Tipperary stud farm they own, it refers to a group of immensely rich Irish high rollers who are gamblers by nature, trade and inclination. |
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Thus, although the debts of the Irish administration were a drop in the ocean of English public finance, they had to be met by Irish parliamentary subsidies. |
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Irish asphalt-layers, the scourge of suburbia, have reached Norway. |
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