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ireland

/ahyuhr-luhnd/US // ˈaɪər lənd //UK // (ˈaɪələnd) //

爱尔兰,爱兰,爱爾蘭,爱尔兰

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : John, 1838–1918, U.S. Roman Catholic clergyman and social reformer, born in Ireland: archbishop of St. Paul, Minnesota, 1888–1918.
    • : a large western island of the British Isles, comprising Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. 32,375 sq. mi..Also called Em·er·ald Isle. Latin Hi·ber·ni·a [hahy-bur-nee-uh] /haɪˈbɜr ni ə/ .
    • : Republic of Ireland. Irish Eire . a republic occupying most of the island of Ireland. 27,137 sq. mi.. Capital: Dublin.Formerly Irish Free State ,Eire .
    • : Heraldry. a coat of arms blazoned as follows: Azure, a harp or stringed argent.

Examples

  • The study was published in Nature Geoscience by scientists from the Potsdam Institute, Ireland’s Maynooth University and University College London.

  • When we tried to book a clinic appointment in Dublin, we were disappointed to find out that they wouldn’t treat us in Ireland.

  • No surprise there, as Ireland’s data protection commissioner is notoriously underfunded and slow-moving.

  • He carries an Ireland that is no longer there, for good and ill.

  • Under current lockdown restrictions in Ireland, the shop is doing only takeaway orders and, prior to partnering with Manna, had never offered delivery.

  • We do see that a few European countries have them on the books: Germany, Poland, Italy, Ireland, a couple more.

  • There were stories of distant strife, in Bosnia, Rwanda, and Northern Ireland, and those stories had the whiff of a different era.

  • She has had clients from all over the world, including Ireland and India, who are drawn to her via word of mouth and her website.

  • The king set about punishing Marshal, opposing his attempts to establish his family in their lands in Ireland and Wales.

  • In Ireland, the name of Sean Quinn will be forever linked in the public mind as the ultimate cautionary tale of riches to rags.

  • The Elizabethan pipes were so small that now when they are dug up in Ireland the poor call them 'fairy pipes' from their tininess.

  • The decay and ruin of nearly all the "old families" in Ireland are among the penalties of disregarding it.

  • Flax is a great staple of the North of Ireland, and three fourths of it is beaten flat to the earth.

  • To talk of an excess of labor, or an inability to employ it, in such a country as Ireland, is to insult the general understanding.

  • I shall be agreeably disappointed if Ireland realizes a fair average harvest this year.