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 Leaving the UK to live in Ireland?
As a UK citizen, what do I nead to do if I want to leave cold wet Britain and set up home in sunny Ireland?
Are there immigration concerns within EU countries?...


 I need a job i am a really smart 13 year old- any suggestions.? Belfast area, lisburn carrick e.t.c.!?
Prefrebely a summer job...

I am smart..

GOOD WITH SWEETS AND FOOD.!

Look old

in belfast ish area

NO WEBSITE MONEY MAKING!...


 Irish people- What did ye Make of the Simpson's Episode in Ireland?
Tbh I thought it had a dull story line, Smart the way they used ''modern Ireland'' though.

So what did ye think of it..

Thanks =]
Additional Details...


 What was the point of Sarkozy coming to Dublin yesterday?
Sher we only wanted to see Carla Bruni!
It was a wasted journey!...


 Where are you goin on your next vacation?
Im Going from london to dublin ireland and cork ireland ^_^
Additional Details
Las Vegas? is that in the Us?...


 Wich are the best places to see in Ireland?
...


 What do Irish people generally think about the English?
Many people I meet for the first time here in Monaghan assume I am Irish and ask: "How long have you been back?" Even those who know I never left in the first place seem to treat me as ...


 In ireland what age do you start high school?(secondary)?
im moving to ireland in septemeber from england, and this year im turning 14.

apparently you start high school at 14 there?
but im not to sure

can anyone help?

...


 Why did Ireland split up into a Northern and southern republic?
Why and when did Ireland split into two - leaving Northern and the sothern republic as two seperate factions?...


 What are your fav places to go in Ireland?
...


 Where is your favorite place in Ireland?
I love to hear about where people have traveled to and the place I love the most is Ireland....


 Why are so many foreigners travelling to ireland to get work?
...


 Is Ireland still really religious?
I watched some movie about these Irish girls in a conventy because they had babies out of wedlock and were ostracised by the community, so basically locked ...


 Can you take your dogs to Ireland?
were planning a trip to the Republic of Ireland for next year, our friends have two Huskies (that they won't put in kennels) will they be allowed to take them with ...


 I am driving to the Irish republic next month?
and im wondering if there are any special requirements needed, like red warning triangles, first aid kits or headlight adaptations?
what about the international driving licence, I hold a full uk ...


 Did the Celtic Tiger benefit everyone?
...


 Wheather in Dublin? help help?
Hello, I want to know the weather of dublin at the end of december, because i spend my last day of the year in this town... It's cold or no?Whiches clothes I put into my suitcase? sorry for my ...


 Should i go to England or Ireland?
next year im going to be apart of an exchange student like thing and i want to know which country to go to. please help! = ]...


 Number of potholes are increasing, does this mean there is going to be an election (important travel info).?
I have noticed over the past twenty years or so that whenever an election is near the number of potholes in the roads starts to increase, have you noticed this recently? If you haven't, then ...


 If i am in the north of ireland do i need a passport to travel to the south?
...



kate:)

Why are people so stereotypical about Irish guys drinking?

i'm about 75% irish and it makes me soo mad!!!!!
even on here there are so many stereotypes answering to all the irish guy related questions saying somthing about drinking.

well people who lived in ireland or are living in ireland or ur alot irish is this true with u? really i think american men are more drunks. fyi i live in america!!!

    



Show all answers


Irishprincess aka muffin+speedy
Yeah i am irish too and it is very annoying. Theres nothing wrong ith an irish man having a few pints dow his local in fact i enjoy nothing more more than having a few pints down my local with my BF.

I think its just igorant people stereotyping us irish people as being irsh drunks who spend all day in the pub and its a stereo type that i hate..


Its me
I'm 100% Irish born and bred and I think its safe to say that I'm fond of a pint or two or twenty at the weekend. I don't go out during the week much but i think I live up to the stereotype. A lot of my friends and family do as well but there are also a lot of people that don't drink very often over here.
I wouldn't take it too personally, I think after 800 years of English repression we deserve to have our freedom and a few pints.


anothernameless
I'm also Irish, so i hear the same crap >.<. Still, alcoholism is a problem in Ireland, but thats true of most countries. Mostly its just a stereotype, created, and sustained, by ignorance.


Ella&#39;s Mamaí
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I hate when people say stuff like im 75% irish....drives me crazy


Orla C
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It's a myth that all Irish guys are heavy drinkers.

I was born and reared in Ireland.


lindsay.
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Everybody witl always be stereotypical and form opinions off of false statements.
A lot of these "drunk" statements are jokes. Have you seen how many Irish Pubs are here in America? Yeah, exactly.
Just be glad they aren't talking directly about YOU.

P.S--Each backround has something they get hounded for.


A Paw Print ? & A Bloody Neck ?
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oh! i thought it was the scottish!


Rivoluzionario moderato
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I live in Dublin and I don't think is a stereotype at all. My Irish friends don't usually go to town during weekend because they don't like being "adventurous" and they get drunk at home. If you drink "only" 2 or 3 beers then: "what's wrong with you?" are u sick?", plus most of the guys get violent. I have personally seen people fighting badly in the streets on Saturdays nights at least 5 times, been attached a couple of times, and alcohol was involved every time.


HeddyS
I am not Irish , but my husband is. We met when I was traveling in Ireland, at a pub and we were both drinking. We ended up living there for 5 years. Sure not everyone drinks but it does seem to be a big part of their culture. Every person I discussed drinking with there, didn't think that a person was an alcholic if they just drank beer everyday, it had to be hard liquior to qualify an alcholic, so that was interesting. When we met we drank about the same, but now that we have kids and don't really go out he diffently drinks more than me , probably about 5 times a week. I think there is drinking problems everywhere in the world but it might be bit more common and acceptable to drink 5+ beers(not hard stuff, lol) 5 times a week in Ireland than in America.


xrayca68
My niece married an Irishman (100%) They met at a pub....where he was drinking and they moved back to Ireland where he lives just down the road from a pub ...where he goes to drink during the week. He is a living example of a stereotype.


rachfig93
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It's just the fact that there are a lot of Irish Pubs in the U.S. and there are a lot of different Irish brews as well.


Crone
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I'm Canadian, of Central European extraction, thrice-married (a Scots anthropologist, a Peruvian construction worker and a New York Jewish hydrogeologist), and my first half-century of life have been interesting.

I have met people of all sorts of backgrounds. It is an important article of faith and knowledge to me that each person is an individual.

Oddly, there have only been three men of Irish background (and one Irish woman) that I've known well enough to speak to. Each of the man was a stereotype in himself.

The first, who married my dad's sister, was an ardent Catholic, who said the Rosary twice a week with his family, treated his wife like a queen, was a hard worker in frontier pubs for much of his life, and drank little, if at all.

The second, an undergraduate colleague, born working class Irish, was passionately anti-English. He was the first white n***r I'd ever met. Very angry and resentful. He'd brought prejudices with him to a place that really neither knew nor cared. He married a calm, African student of educational administration.

The third is my next-door neighbour. Name's Patrick, of course. Born St. Paddy's day. Golden Gloves in his teens. Passionate about his kids. Notorious brawler. Golden tongue. His stated motto is "Whiskey is God's way of keeping the Irish from ruling the world." Can't live with him and can't live without him.

It feels as if I'm caught up in a Katherine Hepburn/Spencer Tracy stereotype ....


joanna p
irish people get mad a lot too, see you're irish



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