Sometimes it is hot and sometimes it is cold. Ireland is not regarded as a hot country, in general Dublin would not be very hot compared to many countries. Check the diagram at the link below showing temperature ranges in Dublin throughout the year, noting that the temperatures are in centigrade.
Ireland is neither very hot or cold. There is only about one day or less per year when the air temperature stays below freezing point. Minimum air temperature falls below zero on about 40 days per year inland, but on less than 10 days per year in most coastal areas. Air temperatures inland normally reach 18 to 20 °C during summer days, and about 8°C during wintertime.
Ireland doesn't suffer from the high and low extremes of temperature, or extremes of weather generally. The highest air temperature recorded in Ireland was 33.3°C at Kilkenny Castle on the 26th of June, 1887. The lowest air temperature was -19.1°C measured at Markree Castle, Co. Sligo on the 16th of January, 1881. The lowest observed grass minimum temperature was -19.6°C in Glasnevin in Dublin on the 12th of January 1982. As a general rule, it rarely gets close to 30°C on the warmest of summer days in Ireland. It only goes below freezing on about 40 days in the year inland and on only about 10 days near the coast, and not far below zero, just a few degrees. You don't get very heavy snow in Ireland too often. In February 2009 there was a heavy snowfall, with the last one on the same scale being in 1982.
Ireland is not hot enough. It is too far north of the equator to have the kind of climate for a desert. It gets a lot of rain and can get some cold weather, so there aren't the conditions for deserts to form.
So Cold in Ireland was created in 1994.
earth is hot and cold
dogs
Ireland remained neutral.
cold and its dang right to
hot, if cold, there is a posibility of a cold!
is it hot or cold tomorrow
hot to cold is heat transfer
do clouds get hot or cold
No, hot and cold are adjectives.
It is hot, higher temperature is hot and lower is cold. Cold temperature is from 0c to about 10c.