Two; the north and south poles. Because a compass will always point you in the direction of the poles due to their magnetic emission, if you start exactly at the north pole and travel due south one mile and due west one more mile, your compass will point you directly back to the pole, which you will be exactly one mile away from, and likewise for the south pole.
8 blocks is in one mile and .1 mile is one mile
A statute mile is a normal mile.
Each mile has 8 eighths of a mile so 4 miles have 32 eighths of a mile
There are four quarters of a mile in a mile. There are four quarters in any whole.
In Irish: Céad Míle Fáilte (one L) For the record, the Scottish version is Ceud Mìle Fàilte.
Cead Mile Failte = 100,000 Welcomes in Irish Gaelic (fall-cha) So .... Aon Mile Failte should = 1000 Welcomes. Not sure what " morantaig" means Hope this helps.. --------------------------- morantaig
Ireland, the land of a thousand welcomes.
"kaid meel-aa fall-cha"
"CÉAD MÍLE FÁILTE" means "100,000 Welcomes".
Well, darling, "Cead mile failte" is Irish for "a hundred thousand welcomes." So, if someone throws that phrase your way, you better come back with a big smile and a "Thank you very much!" It's just good manners, honey.
There are many ways one can find Failte, Ireland. One can find Failte, Ireland by visiting popular on the web GPS systems such as the very popular Yahoo! Maps.
There is no response to "Céad míle fáilte", it's only used in writing (on signs etc.) or when giving speechs or welcoming large groups of people who are not expected to reply.
"Welcome home"
"Céad míle fáilte" means "a hundred thousand welcomes" and it is still used as a common greeting in Ireland. So yes, it does still apply.
The phrase appears in both Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic.In both, it means "A Hundred Thousand Welcomes".In Irish Gaelic, it's spelled Céad Míle Fáilte. In Gaelic (Scottish), Ceud Mìle Fàilte.That's fine for a sign in a pub or shop. But to be grammatically correct, if you're saying it to a person, it should be "A hundred thousand welcomes to you" :Céad míle fáilte romhat (Irish Gaelic) or Ceud mìle fàilte dhut (Scots Gaelic).It's pronounced kayd meela foll-tja rót in Irish Gaelic,and kee-ud meel-a faahl-tja ghooht in Scots Gaelic.
ceudmìlefàilte!