I am good thank you and you? (that's correct) however, it's ceart go leor, no biggy.
In ainm an Athar agus an Mhic agus an Spioraid Naoimh
It's Conas atà tù? and pronounced ( conas; C is as K. o is like the o in son. n. a like the a in bat. s is sh like in show. atà; a as in bat. t as t. à is aw like in awful. tù t as t. ù as the u in rule.
Goodbye (Slán leat) and good luck (agus go n-éirí an bóthar leat) and cheers (agus sláinte)
"Keep it for luck" would be "Coinnigh é agus go cuire sé an t-ádh ort".
As a full sentence it makes no sense. "Dirt t brag" should probably be "Dúirt tú bréag". "Dúirt tú bréag" means "You said a lie" "T ar bhragadir" should proabably be "Tá ar bhréagadóir" "Tá ar bhréagadóir" means "A liar has to" "a bheith" means "to be" "cuimhne mhaith aige" means "he has a good memory" "an bmnta" should proabaly be "bómán" "slaig bhunata agus an bómán" means "basic waste ore and the fool"
Of course English is the predominant language in Ireland, but if you want towish someone well in the Irish language, it would be:Tá dea-mhéin agam duit or Tá dea-mhéin agam daoibh.The first sentence is addressing one person; the second, more than one.
T and t mean teenage and t is dynamite
_a_t_i_a
It means T!
If you were addressing an individual, you could say: 'Slán agus go n-éirí an t-ádh leat'. If addressing more than one person, change 'leat' to 'libh'.
In Scottish Gaelic it is dòchas;in Irish Gaelic it is dóchas;In Manx Gaelic it is doghys, also treisht, jerkallys.