No idea, but the main ones are: data processing equipment, other machinery and equipment, chemicals, petroleum and petroleum products, textiles, clothing.
the same as any other westernised country really. Fuel oil, coal, and soybeans are some of the major imports in Ireland.
Not in itself, as most leaders were captured and killed. However it did then gain sympathy from the Irish people eventually leading to the war of independence and a treaty setting up the modern day Northern Ireland and Republic of Ireland.
The UK did not import any countries.
That is a complex question to answer in detail, as it has over 800 years of Irish history as part of it leading to the troubles that began in 1969. The argument was not really between Ireland and Northern Ireland, but between people within Northern Ireland with different views. In simple terms it was between people who wanted to be separate from the Republic of Ireland and ruled by Britain, and people who wanted to be totally independent of Britain and have a united Ireland. Some people pursued their respective cause with violence, though it has to be said that that was a minority of the people. The majority of the people, while being of one opinion or the other, pursued their cause peacefully or just had their opinions but carried on their lives as normal.
If you import files or information into one type of software from another type, you open them in a format that can be used in the new software. You can now import graphics from other applications They import goods from Asia for resale.
They import Guiness and Silver
chickens
Because people in Ireland want to each chocolate that is not made in Ireland sometimes.
oil
New Zealand
If it is something small there should not be a problem. Ireland do not have a stringent import authority
Coal, sand, waste, wood
pretty much everything! (its an island)
Alcohol of course
Oysters. Guinness. U2.
Irish people like oranges but they don't grow in Ireland, so they have to be imported.
not since they were relocated to Pluto in 1996