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cbjustmusic · 4 months
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"The Green Fields of France" performed by Niall Hanna and Niamh Farrell. ____________________________ The Green Fields of France Songwriter: Eric Bogle
Well, how do you do, young Willie McBride? Do you mind if I sit here down by your graveside? And rest for a while in the warm summer sun I've been walking all day and I'm nearly done I see by your gravestone you were only nineteen When you joined the great fallen in 1916 I hope you died well and I hope you died clean Or young Willie McBride, was it slow and obscene?
Did they beat the drum slowly, did they play the life lowly? Did they sound the death march as they lowered you down? Did the band play The Last Post in chorus? Did the pipes play the Flowers of the Forest?
Did you leave a wife or sweetheart behind In some faithful heart is your memory enshrined? Although you died back in 1916 In that faithful heart are you forever nineteen? Or are you a stranger without even a name Enclosed in forever behind the glass frame In an old photograph, torn, battered and stained And faded to yellow in a brown leather frame?
The sun now it shines on the green fields of France There's a warm summer breeze that makes the red poppies dance And look how the sun shines from under the clouds There's no gas, no barbed wire, there's no guns firing now But here in this graveyard it's still No Man's Land The countless white crosses stand mute in the sand To man's blind indifference to his fellow man To a whole generation that were butchered and damned
Ah young Willie McBride, I can't help wonder why Do those that lie here know why did they die? And did they believe when the answered the cause Did they really believe that this war would end wars? Well the sorrow, the suffering, the glory, the pain The killing and dying, were all done in vain For young Willie McBride, it all happened again And again, and again, and again, and again
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vidanicks · 9 months
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Jealousy with Niamh Farrell
Welcome to Predrinks at Laylah’s, the podcast where I have a drink with a guest and discuss the topic du jour. In this episode, I had the most gorgeous chats about toxic jealousy with the amazing Niamh Farrell. Listen Here CREDITS: Hosted by Laylah Beattie Produced by Niall Duggan Music by DJ Succulent Patreon: patreon.com/PredrinksatLaylahs
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tinyshe · 2 years
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Eleanor na Run   Linda Nic Leoid Niamh Farrell
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thestageyshelf · 2 years
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SOLD 🎭 Love Never Dies @ Adelphi Theatre 2010 (#95)
Title: Love Never Dies
Venue: Adelphi Theatre
Year: 2010
Programme and Souvenir Brochure duo
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Condition: Wear to edges
Author: Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber. Lyrics by Glenn Slater. Book by Andrew Lloyd Webbe and Ben Elton with Glenn Slater and Frederick Forsyth. Addiitonal lyrics by Charles Hart
Director: Jack O'Brien
Choreographer: Jerry Mitchell
Cast: Ramin Karimloo, Sierra Boggess, Joseph Millson, Liz Robertson, Summer Strallen, Niamh Perry, Adam Pearce, Jami Reid-Quarrell, Theo Caplan, Thomas Celik, Jack Costello, Daniel Dowling, Tom Bryan Isaacs, Harry Polden, Derek Andrews, Danny Chase, Dean Chisnall, Paul Farrell, Charlene Ford, Celia Graham, SImon Ray Harvey, Jack Horner, Erin Anna Jameson, Jack Jefferson, Pip Jordan, Jessica Kirton, Louise Madison, Sally Miller, Janet Mooney, Colette Morrow, Tam Mutu, Ashley Nottingham, Tom Oakley, Mark Skipper, Lucy Van Gasse, Annette Yeo, Helen Dixon, Lucie Downer, Chris Gage, Rae Piper, Jonathan Stewart, Tim Walton
FIND ON EBAY HERE
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thelivingsp1rit · 4 years
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Celtic Gaelic Folk Song;
“Eleanór Na Rún.”
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polysprachig · 5 years
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(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sC9v4DCFdcM)
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senadimell · 2 years
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Well, how do you do, young Willy McBride? Do you mind if I sit here down by your graveside And rest for a while in the warm summer sun? I've been walking all day and I'm nearly done. I see by your gravestone your were only nineteen When you joined the Great Falling in nineteen sixteen. Well, I hope you died well, and I hope you died clean. Or, young Willy McBride, was it slow and obscene?
Did they beat the drum slowly, did they play the fife lowly Did they sound the death march as they lowered you down? Did the bands play the last post and chorus? Did the pipes play the flowers of the forest?
Did you leave a wife or a sweetheart behind In some faithful heart is your memory enshrined? Although you died back in nineteen sixteen In that faithful heart are you forever nineteen?
Or are you a stranger without even a name Enclosed there forever behind a glass pane In an old photograph torn, battered, and stained And faded to yellow in a brown leather frame.
Did they beat the drum slowly, did they play the fife lowly Did they sound the death march as they lowered you down? Did the bands play the last post and chorus? Did the pipes play the flowers of the forest?
Well, the sun, now, it shines on the green fields of France There's a warm summer breeze that makes the red poppies dance And see how the sun shines from under the clouds There's no gas no barbed wire, there's no guns firing now.
But here in this graveyard it's still no man’s land The countless white crosses stand mute in the sand To man's blind indifference to his fellow man To a whole generation that were butchered and damned.
Did they beat the drum slowly, did they play the fife lowly Did they sound the death march as they lowered you down? Did the bands play the last post and chorus? Did the pipes play the flowers of the forest?
Now, Willy McBride, I can't help wonder why— Do those that lie here know why did they die? And did they believe when they answered the call Did they really believe that this war could end wars? Well, the sorrow, the suffering, the glory, the pain, The killing and dying was all done in vain For, young Willy McBride, it all happened again And again, and again, and again, and again
Did they beat the drum slowly, did they play the fife lowly Did they sound the death march as they lowered you down? Did the bands play the last post and chorus? Did the pipes play the flowers of the forest?
Did they beat the drum slowly, did they play the fife lowly Did they sound the death march as they lowered you down? Did the bands play the last post and chorus? Did the pipes play the flowers of the forest?
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loumauve · 4 years
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The Green Fields of France | Ireland's Favourite Folk Song | RTÉ One
Ireland’s Favourite Folk Song bespoke performance of ‘The Green Fields of France’ by Niall Hanna and Niamh Farrell.
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p-isforpoetry · 3 years
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Master poetry playlist
Each of these links will redirect you to the relevant playlist on my non-monetized Youtube channel (new video every other day)
By actors
Tom Hiddleston (Words and Music, Ximalaya FM, Coriolanus watchalong with Josie Rourke, Tom and the cast, interviews, Betrayal reunion)
Bruce Alexander, Sam Alexander, Nonso Anozie, Richard Armitage, Dame Eileen Atkins, Annette Badland, Kathy Bates, Xander Berkeley, Sir Kenneth Branagh, Richard Burton, Simon Callow, Robert Carlyle, Helena Bonham Carter, Kim Cattrall, Glenn Close, Sir William "Billy" Connolly, Ben Crystal, Benedict Cumberbatch, Ossie Davis, Dame Judi Dench, Vincent D'Onofrio, Brian Dennehy, James Earl Jones, Beatie Edney, Mark Ebulue, Ralph Fiennes, Kate Fleetwood, Jodie Foster, Polly Frame, Morgan Freeman, Stephen Fry, Michael Gaston, Sir John Gielgud, Aidan Gillen, Rupert Graves, Eva Green, Sir Alec Guinness, David Harewood, Tom Hollander, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Jeremy Irons, Alex Jennings, Toby Jones, Jude Law, Robert Sean Leonard, Damian Lewis, John Lithgow, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Helen Mirren, Richard Mitchley, Alfred Molina, Sir Roger Moore, Sam Neill, Al Pacino, Ron Perlman, Prasanna Puwanarajah, Sir Jonathan Pryce, Alan Rickman, Sir Simon Russell Beale, Susan Sarandon, Andrew Scott, Fiona Shaw, Michael Sheen, Gary Sinise, Dan Stevens, Sir Patrick Stewart, Mitchell Brian Stokes, Mark Strong, Natasha Richardson, David Tennant, Kathleen Turner, Eli Wallach, Dominic West and Samuel West.
In this playlist there is 1-1 poem read by Tony Amendola, Sebastian Arcelus, Mackenzie Astin, Gerry Bamman, Alan Bates, Gina Bellman, Cathy Belton, Edward Bennett, Tilly Blackwood, Claire Bloom, Lindy Booth, Peter Bowles, Eleanor Bron, Sir Michael Caine, Peter Capaldi, Sir Sean Connery, Lindsay Crouse, Ruby Dee, Adrian Dunbar, Lindsay Duncan, Noma Dumezweni, Adetomiwa Edun, Rupert Evans, Colin Farrell, Deborah Findlay, Edward Fox, Jonathan Frakes, Hugh Fraser, Jennifer Garner, Jill Gascoine, Annabeth Gish, Iain Glen, Ioan Gruffudd, Julie Harris, Josh Hartnett, John Heffernan, Douglas Henshall, Hozier, Sir John Hurt, Amy Irving, Sir Derek Jacobi, Peter Jacobson, Lennie James, Paterson Joseph, Rory Kinnear, Hugh Laurie, Sir Christopher Lee, Robert Lindsay, Ophelia Lovibond, Helen McCrory, Niamh McGrady, Sepideh Moafi, Cillian Murphy, Liam Neeson, Tessa Peake-Jones, Dame Sian Phillips, Wendell Pierce, Rosamund Pike, Diana Quick, Jemma Redgrave, Iwan Rheon, Sebastian Roché, Hugh Ross, William Sadler, Kerry Shale, Imelda Staunton, Rufus Sewell, Jenna Stern, Juliet Stevenson, Nathan Stewart-Jarrett, Jo Stone-Fewings, Tilda Swinton, Peter O’ Toole, Harry Treadaway, Indira Varma, Dame Harriet Walter, Sam Waterson, Fritz Weaver and Carolyn Wickwire.
By poets
W. H. Auden, William Blake, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Robert Browning, Robert Burns, Byron, Lewis Carroll, John Clare, E. E. Cummings, Emily Dickinson, John Donne, T. S. Eliot, Robert Frost, Seamus Heaney, Robert Herrick, Gerard Manley Hopkins, John Keats, Rudyard Kipling, Edward Lear, Robert Lowell, Christopher Marlowe, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Pablo Neruda, E. A. Poe, Christina Rossetti, William Shakespeare, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Alfred Tennyson, Dylan Thomas, William Wordsworth, W. B. Yeats and other poets.
Short scenes from movies/theatre plays
Coriolanus (Tom Hiddleston), King Lear (Sir Athony Hopkins), Much Ado About Nothing (Emma Thompson & Kenneth Branagh), Hamlet (Andrew Scott), Much Ado About Nothing (Catherine Tate & David Tennant), Macbeth (Sir Patrick Stewart)
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ancestorsalive · 3 years
Video
Traditional Celtic Songs - Fill-iù Oro Hù Ò & O Cò Bheir Mi Leam
Linda Nic Leòid, Niamh Farrell, Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh and Julie Fowlis perform the traditional Celtic songs Fill-iù Oro Hù Ò (0:00) & O Cò Bheir Mi Leam (1:51) with accompaniment from Seamie O'Dowd (Guitar) and Stephen Markham (Harmonium).
 [description taken from Trad TG4, the channel of the original clip]
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feliciamontagues · 4 years
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Official promo pictures and episode summaries for  episodes 6-10 of Father Brown Series 8, airing on BBC in January 2020. Summaries under  the cut for length.   (Promo pics and photos for episodes 1-5 can be found here.)
The Numbers of The Beast (13 Jan 2020)
Mrs McCarthy strikes it lucky at the church bingo with the help of a fortune-teller.
Mrs McCarthy (Sorcha Cusack) is stunned when her sister Roisin (Niamh Cusack) arrives in Kembleford. Roisin’s made friends with a fortune-teller named Trafalgar Devlin (Grant Masters) and wants Mrs McCarthy to meet him. Over a cup of tea, Trafalgar predicts the winning jackpot line numbers for the Hambleston Church bingo event run by Samuel Hinds (Nigel Betts). Later, at the church bingo, Mrs McCarthy buys a card with Trafalgar’s numbers on it and wins the jackpot prize, much to her astonishment!
Meanwhile Anna Bailey (Alison Pargeter) is keen to speak to Father Brown (Mark Williams) urgently about some fraud she’s discovered. When Father Brown goes to see her the next morning to discuss the matter, he finds her dead. Her husband Peter (Graeme Hawley) is holding a bloodied murder weapon, and insisting it wasn’t him. But is Peter telling the truth?
The River Corrupted (14 Jan 2020)
Sid returns to Kembleford to ask his old family to help save his new one.
After Maeve Lochlin’s (Bronte Terrell) father Pat (Ian Puleston-Davies) is accused of murdering Roger Barford (Andrew Whipp), Maeve and her boyfriend Sid Carter (Alex Price) travel to Kembleford to ask Father Brown (Mark Williams) to help them clear his name.
Father Brown promises to do all he can and pays a visit to Blind ‘Arry’s (Alan Williams) where Pat is laying low. Things don’t look good for Pat when it is revealed that he and Roger had an argument about money on the night Roger was killed. Roger’s widow Georgina Barford (Hannah Yelland) is convinced that Pat is guilty, but Father Brown’s suspicions turn towards barmaid Polly Beavington (Gabrielle Creevy), who used to work for Roger at his textile factory. Were the two having an affair? And did Roger finish it? When Pat is arrested for murder, it’s down to Father Brown to prove his innocence before it’s too late.
The Curse of the Aesthetic (15 Jan 2020)
Father Brown must discover who is out to kill a tortured artist before it’s too late.
Tortured artist Benjamin Milton (George Webster) struggles to contain his emotions when an exhibition at his estate, Milton Manor, dedicated to his ‘muse’ Isabella (Isabella Peroux), doesn’t go to plan. A bust of her likeness is defaced; and a suspected attempt on his life is made when art collector Conrad French (Justin Avoth) tries to enter Benjamin’s studio and is electrocuted.
Meanwhile Benjamin is also at loggerheads with his sister Katie (Rhiannon Neads) over his share of the estate, which they both occupy. He also has to fend off the unwanted advances of would-be life model Rose (Danielle Phillips). Things get even worse when his housekeeper Nanny Ribble (Harriet Thorpe) is found murdered, with a knitting needle stuck in her neck. It’s down to Father Brown (Mark Williams) to work out who is responsible for Nanny Ribble’s death, and who would want to kill Benjamin and why.
The Fall of the House of St Gardner (16 Jan 2020)
A gossip columnist is murdered after threatening to expose the secrets of a fashion house.
When fashion designer Lady Vivien St Gardner-Verde (Rosalie Craig) heeds Bunty’s (Emer Kenny) warnings not to let gossip columnist Barbara Farrell (Amanda Lawrence) attend her new fashion show, Barbara promises revenge on the House of St Gardner. But when the fashion show venue falls through, Vivien decides to stage the event in Kembleford instead, along with the help of Sir Ralph Verde (Nick Waring), Harvey St Gardner (Ben Lamb), and model Camille Hogan (Ingvild Lakou).
However, when they arrive, they discover Barbara has tracked them down to Kembleford and is just as vicious as ever. Father Brown (Mark Williams) implores Barbara to choose a righteous path; but she ignores him. Soon after, Barbara is found dead in her lodgings - her head bashed in with a typewriter. Was she planning to publish a secret that would bring the St Gardner house down? Meanwhile Bunty, who is romantically involved with Harvey, is left wondering if he could be Barbara’s killer…
The Tower of Lost Souls (17 Jan 2020)
Father Brown joins forces with Chief Inspector Valentine to uncover a dark secret at Helmsley House.
After the body of Reginald Brody is discovered at the bottom of Helmsley Tower, Chief Inspector Valentine (Hugo Speer) returns to Kembleford to investigate. Suspecting that there is more to his death than suicide, Valentine enlists Father Brown (Mark Williams) to help investigate.
Meanwhile Alistair Helmsley (Gyuri Sarossy) and his wife Emily (Susannah Wise), with gardener George Oakley (Cal Macaninch), are determined to continue organizing a fundraiser for injured veterans at Helmsley House. Valentine suspects Alistair’s brother William (James Anderson) may have pertinent information and brings him in for questioning, but he refuses to talk. Later, at the top of Helmsley Tower, William is about to reveal the identity of Reginald’s killer when he is murdered, and Valentine is framed for his death, leading to his arrest. It is down to Father Brown and Chief Inspector Sullivan (Tom Chambers) to clear Valentine’s name and find the real killer.
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epoxyconfetti · 4 years
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Irish female artists unite for incredible cover of Cranberries song.
Imelda May, Tolu Makay, Erica Coady and Una Healy amongst many others including Laoise, Soulé, Stephanie Rainey, Sibéal, Caroline Corr, Moya Brennan, Emma Langford, Saint Sister, Fia Moon, Melina Malone, Lilla Vargen, Ailbhe Reddy, Aimée, Áine Cahill, Allie Sherlock, Elaine Mai, Eve Belle, Faye O'Rourke, Lisa Hannigan, Loah, Lyra, Niamh Farrell, Orla Gartland, Pillow Queens, Roe, Róisín O, RuthAnne, Wyvern Lingo, Aoife Dennedy, Louize Carroll, Lucia McPartlin, Maria O'Connor, Maria Ryan, Sarah Lynch and Theodora Byrne
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glorious-mysteries · 4 years
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Hey! So, I just heard this song called The Green Fields of France; apparently it's very popular, so maybe you heard it already. But if you haven't, there's a version sung by Niamh Farrell and Nial Hanna on youtube. Would you to hear what you think of it
Hello! I'm very familiar with The Green Fields of France. It's one of those songs that I not only enjoy, but also appriciate. I think it captures the terribleness of WWI, which Vera Brittain called "a tragedy and a vast stupidity; a waste of youth and time." In her memoir of serving as a VAD nurse from 1915-18, Brittain complained about the insipid poems and songs written about the during the war that tried to make it seem noble or sentimental. This song fortunately escapes that fate, lamenting "a whole generation that were butchered and damned."
I think the line that really gets to me is when the narrator wonders "Did they believe when they answered the call/ Did they really believe that this war would end wars?" To be sure some of them did, only to survive and see another world war within their lifetime. Or else they were like Willy McBride, killed before they turned 20 in a war that was thousands of times bigger than themselves.
The version I had previously listened to is by The High Kings (also on youtube), and it's very good but, oh my goodness, Niamh Farrel is a beautiful singer. She and Niall Hanna make a lovely duet, and they definitely do the song justice. I'll have to check out more of their stuff. Thank you for the recommendation!
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starrynightshade · 4 years
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Rules: answer 16 questions and tag 16 people you want to get to know better
Nickname: Star
Zodiac Sign: Gemini
Height: 5′7″
Hogwarts 🏡: Ravenclaw
Team Edward or Team Jacob: Fuck ‘em both, I want what Alice and Jasper had.
Last thing I googled: cookie jokes, no I will not be elaborating on that.
Song stuck in my head: Literally could not sleep this morning because I had “the Schuyler Sisters” from Hamilton stuck in my head.
Following: 410
Followers: 422
Amount of 💤 I get: Today? About 2-3 hours, I think. Usually about 7.
Lucky numbers: 13, 22
Dream job: IDK, something creative? I have an English degree (double minored in Anthropology and Global Studies). Absolutely taking suggestions.
Wearing: XXL t-shirt from my local hockey team and floral pajama pants
Favourite Songs: I checked Spotify, but I felt like it was skewed because most of them were off of my FIiL playlist, so off the top of my head:
Shake It Out - Florence + The Machine (this song always lifts my spirits for whatever reason)
In the Waiting -Kina Grannis
Stutter - Mariana’s Trench (another instant mod booster)
Heartlines -Broods (Jess made me love it)
Little Bit - Lykke Li
Old Me - Betty Who
Send Me the Moon - Sara Bareilles
Cherry Wine - Hozier
Eleanór na Rún (Linda Nic Leóid and Niamh Farrell have a version on youTube that’s gay as hell)
My Song 5 - HAIM
Instruments: I wish...
Random Fact: I’ve never broken a bone. Not even when I got hit by a car.
Aesthetics: I don’t think I have one?
Tagged by: @welt-verbessererin
Tagging: @aryasbadbenergy @raginglittlehurricane @sassbewitchedmyass @greeneyedwildthing @the-end-is-kigh @hisyetisgirl @elfigreen14 @thatsaysalotalotalot @paintapictureonsilence @coffeexwhiskey @jjclarku @fandomjuxtaposition @yanak324 @thelandofnothing @gizkasparadise @fineosaur
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headlesssamurai · 5 years
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evrylilthing · 5 years
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Irish names
GIRLS
Tiffany, Molly, Shannon, Shawn, Fiona, Casey, Caitlin, Kathleen, Aidan, Brielle, Kennedy, Reagan, Delaney, Corey, Cassidy, Sheila, Bridget, Ciana, Alaina, Colleen, Maureen, Ciara, Siobhan, Shea, Maeve, Teagan, Aileen, Alayna, Fallon/Fallyn/Falon, Alani, Ahana, Adara, Agate, Aghadreena, Aghamora, Aghavilla, Aghna, Aideen, Aileene, Ailey, Aili, Ailia, Ailin, Ailis, Ailisa, Ailise, Aine, Aislin, Aisling, Alaine/Alayne, Alana/Alanna/Allana, Alina, Alma, Alona, Alvy, Annabla, Aoife, Ardala, Arleen/Arlene/Arline, Assana, Athracht, Avonmora, Brea, Breanne, Breck, Bree, Breena, Brenda, Brendalynn, Brenna, Bria, Brianna/Briana/Bryanna, Bryna, Cacey, Cacia, Cadee, Cait, Caitie, Caitlan/Caitlyn, Callaghan/Callahan, Callee/Calli/Callie, Carlin, Catlee, Cattee, Chiara, Christi, Cleonie, Cody, Colene, Conchobara/Conchobarra/Conchobarre, Connelly, Corene, Cory, Crissy, Dana, Darcey/Darci/Darcy, Deidra/Diedre, Derval, Dervla, Dubhain, Dubheasa, Eavan, Eibhlhin, Eila, Eilena, Eithne, Elva, Elvinia, Eny, Erin, Etain, Etney, Farran/Farren, Fidelma, Fineena, Finola, Flanna, Flannery, Gliona, Gobinet/Gobnait, Grainne, Henley, Hiolair, Honor, Honoria, Ida, Inis, Irvette, Izett, Jana, Kady, Kaitlan/Kaitlin/Kaitlyn/Kaitlynn, Kallie, Keanna/Keana, Keara, Kearney, Keeley/Keely, Keiana, Keilah, Keira/Kera, Kelly/Kelley/Kellye, Kellsey/Kelsee/Kelsi, Kellyn, Keri/Kerri, Keriana/Kerianna, Kerianne, Kerilynn/Kerilyn, Kerra, Kiandra, Kiani/Kianni, Kianna, Kiona/Kionah, Laetitia, Lana, Lil, Luighseach, Mada, Maille, Maire, Mairead, Maiti, Margaret, Maude, Mayra, Meghan, Mide, Mollie, Monahan, Moncha, Mor, Moya, Muirgheal, Neala, Neve, Niamh, Noreen, Noreena, Oilbhe, Olive, Oma, Ona, Oona, Oonagh, Orna, Quinn, Renny, Riley, Rory, Sadbh, Seosaimhthin, Shaelan, Shanahan, Shanessa, Shauna, Sheridan, Sinead, Sineaid, Sunniva, Tara, Teagan, Tiryns, Torberta, Torrey/Torrie, Tosia, Trina, Trudie, Tyyne
BOYS
Ryan, Kevin, Sean, Connor, Riley, Quinn, Shannon, Haley, Nolan, Shawn, Declan, Shane, Keith, Aidan, Delaney, Griffin, Cassidy, Brody, Sun, Desmond, Keegan, Conner, Murphy, Shay/Shea, Rory, Tier, Cullen, Tag, Niall, Fallon, Flynn, Finnegan, Fay, Gael, Shayan, Agustin, Ahearn, Aiden, Aidrian, Ainmire, Amery, Amhlaoibh, Angus, Anlon, Ardal, Ardghal, Arlen, Artegal, Arthgallo, Auley, Baird, Barrington, Barry, Beamard, Beartlaidh, Berkeley, Blaine, Blair, Bohannon, Braddon, Braden, Bradon, Brady, Braeden, Bram, Brannan, Branson, Brayden, Breandan, Breen, Brenden, Brendan, Brennan, Brosnan, Cace, Cacey, Cain, Caley, Caly, Caolaidhe, Carey, Carlin, Carlus, Case, Cashel, Caspian, Cassian, Cavan, Cearnach, Channe, Cian, Cianan, Cillian, Cody, Coillcumhann, Colla, Collin, Colm, Conall, Conan, Conary, Conchobhar, Conn, Connell, Connelly, Conor, Conrad, Conroy, Corcoran, Corin, Cormac, Cory, Cowan, Cronan, Cuinn, Daegan, Dagen, Daire, Dallan, Darby, Darick, Darroch, Deegan, Dempsey, Dermod, Derry, Dilan, Dillon, Donahue, Donal, Donavan/Donavon/Donovan, Dorrin, Douglas, Doyle, Driscoll, Duane, Duante, Dylon, Eagan, Eamon, Egan/Egon, Evin, Ewan, Fachnan, Faiion, Farran, Farrell, Farren, Fiannon, Finian, Finn, Fionan, Fionn, Fionnbarr, Fiyn, Flainn, Flanagan, Flannagain, Flannery, Flinn, Floinn, Forba, Gairbith, Gallagher, Gannon, Garbhan, Garve, Gearoid, Geralt, Gil, Gofraidh, Gorman, Gothfraidh, Grady, Hagan, Harkin, Hayes, Henley, Hurley, Irving, Izod, Kagan, Kane, Kavan/Kaven, Keagan, Kealan, Keanan, Keandre, Keane, Keannen, Kearney, Keary, Keenan, Keene, Kegan, Keilah, Kier, Kieran, Kelan, Kelsey, Kenan, Kenny, Keon, Kerrigan, Kerry, Kevan, Kian, Kianni, Kienan, Kieran, Kierce, Kiernan, Kildare, Kiley, Killian, Kye, Kylan, Kylar, Kyler, Kyle, Kylen, Kyrell, Lacey, Lakeland, Laughlin, Lee, Lennon, Liam, Lochlann, Loughlin, Lughaidh, Lyam, Maher, Malone, Maloney, Malvin, Melvin, Melvyn, Mickey, Miles, Mitchell, Morgan, Morrisey, Murchadh, Murray, Murry, Myles, Naal, Nielan, Niell, Neven, Nevan, Noland, Nolen, Odell, Odhran, Oscar, Padraic, Paidi, Patrick, Payton/Peyton, Phelan, Pierce, Quaid, Quigley, Quinlan, Rayan, Regan, Reilley, Reilly, Rhyan, Rian, Rogan, Ronan, Rooney, Rourke, Rowan/Rowen/Rowin, Ruadhagan, Rye, Ryen, Rylan, Ryland, Ryleigh, Ryley, Ryon, Seanan, Shae, Shai, Shain, Shaine, Shamus, Shan, Shandon, Shanley, Shann, Shaughn, Shaun, Shaw, Shaylon, Shayne, Sheary, Sheridan, Shey, Suileabhan, Tait, Tate, Taveon, Tavin, Tavion, Tavis, Tavon, Teague, Teauge, Thacker, Thurstan, Torgeir, Torhte, Tormaigh, Torrey, Torsten, Tostig, Tuomo, Tyronne, Tyrus, Tyson, Tywysog, Ungus
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