Irish-born or just Irish-for-the-day? Prove it—let your score talk!
By Richie.Zh01
40 Questions
L1 Difficulty
1 × 40 Points
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About This Quiz
This quiz is all things green, gold, and gloriously Celtic.
From the real Saint Patrick to river-dyeing shenanigans, we’re breaking down how a holy day turned into a worldwide beer bash—what leprechauns actually clock in for, and which president had shamrocks FedEx’d from Dublin.
Finish it and you’ll leave with more trivia than any pub-crawl crew can handle. Bring your own four-leaf clover (the real ones, not the cereal) and let’s see if the luck lands on you!
What kind of hat is commonly associated with leprechauns?
[C] Top hat | Leprechauns rock the top hat with more style than Victorian gentlemen, proving that formal headwear works better when you're three feet tall and magically inclined.
2/40
What year did the color green start to get associated with St. Patrick's Day?
[D] 1798 | The Irish Rebellion of 1798 popularized wearing green as political statement against British rule. Before that, Saint Patrick's color was actually blue—history's biggest rebrand success.
3/40
What type of fish is traditionally eaten in Ireland on St. Patrick's Day?
[B] Salmon | While Americans import corned beef traditions, the Irish stick with local salmon. It's healthier, traditional, and doesn't require explaining what "corned" means to confused tourists.
4/40
What is the significance of wearing green on St. Patrick's Day?
[A] It makes you invisible to leprechauns | Legend says leprechauns pinch anyone they can see—wearing green provides magical camouflage. It's basically the Irish version of vampire garlic, but more fashionable.
5/40
What is a common greeting on St. Patrick's Day?
[A] Happy St. Patrick's Day | Simple, universal, and impossible to mispronounce after several pints. "Top of the morning" is actually more Hollywood than Dublin.
6/40
What activity involves searching for hidden gold or treasure on St. Patrick's Day?
[D] Treasure hunt | Kids search for chocolate coins while adults search for their dignity after last night's pub crawl. Both quests typically end in disappointment and headaches.
7/40
What food item is often decorated with green icing for St. Patrick's Day?
[C] Cookies | Sugar cookies get the full green treatment, from shamrock shapes to leprechaun faces. They're basically edible decorations that justify eating dessert for breakfast.
8/40
What is the term for a group of Irish dancers?
[B] A céilí | Originally meaning a social gathering with music and dancing, now it's synchronized leg flailing in elaborate costumes. Group therapy never looked so athletic.
9/40
What is the ancient Irish manuscript with beautiful illustrations?
[D] Book of Kells | Medieval monks spent years creating this masterpiece, proving that workplace procrastination existed even before the internet. Each page contains more detail than modern attention spans can handle.
10/40
Where does St. Patrick's Festival occur?
[A] Dublin | Five days of parades, concerts, and tourists wondering why actual Irish people seem less enthusiastic about green beer. It's Mardi Gras with better weather expectations and worse results.
11/40
What is the famous Irish cream liqueur?
[B] Baileys | Invented in 1973, proving that mixing whiskey with cream was humanity's destiny. It's dessert that doubles as a nightcap, making dieting mathematically impossible.
12/40
What is the name of the famous Irish beer festival?
[C] Irish Craft Beer Festival | Where beer snobs and casual drinkers unite over shared appreciation for fermented grains. It's like Comic-Con for people who really understand hops.
13/40
What famous Irish whiskey distillery is known for the World's Leading Distillery Tour?
[B] Jameson Distillery | Their tour in Dublin converts whiskey skeptics into enthusiasts through strategic tasting placement. You're basically paying to develop an expensive hobby.
14/40
What city started serving green beer on St. Patrick's Day?
[C] New York | New York bartenders invented this abomination in the early 1900s, proving that Americans will add food coloring to anything if it seems festive enough.
15/40
What is the Irish term for a mischievous fairy?
[A] Pooka | Shape-shifting troublemakers from Irish folklore who range from harmless pranksters to chaotic agents. Think Loki, but Irish and probably drunk.
16/40
What does the Irish word "craic" mean?
[D] Fun and enjoyment | Pronounced "crack," confusing tourists everywhere who wonder why the Irish are so casual about drug references. It's actually about good times, not illegal substances.
17/40
What is the traditional Irish fairy called?
[D] Sidhe | Pronounced "shee," these supernatural beings live in parallel dimensions accessed through ancient mounds. They're basically Irish interdimensional travelers with attitude problems.
18/40
What is the name of the famous Irish festival of arts and music?
[B] Electric Picnic | Ireland's answer to Coachella, but with more rain and better craic. Where millennials pretend to rough it while paying fortune for glamping tents.
19/40
Which famous Irish actor played James Bond?
[C] Pierce Brosnan | From Drogheda to 007, Brosnan brought Irish charm to British spy work. He made martinis seem sophisticated again after years of Roger Moore's eyebrow acting.
20/40
Which Irish actor is known for his role in "Taken"?
[A] Liam Neeson | His particular set of skills includes being Northern Irish, impossibly tall, and making threatening phone calls cinematic gold. Every dad now quotes him when their kids don't answer texts.
21/40
What is the traditional Irish blessing?
[D] May the road rise up to meet you | The full blessing is longer than most wedding vows, essentially wishing someone easy travels through life. It's GPS directions from the heart.
22/40
What is the name of the famous Irish ship that sank in 1912?
[A] RMS Titanic | Built in Belfast, it was called unsinkable until that iceberg had other plans. Ireland built it, England sailed it, and the Atlantic claimed it—international tragedy at its finest.
23/40
What is the famous Irish novel by James Joyce?
[C] Ulysses | Joyce wrote 265,000 words about one day in Dublin, proving that Irish writers don't believe in editing. Most people claim they've read it; few actually have.
24/40
What is the National Theatre of Ireland?
[B] Abbey Theatre | Founded in 1904 by W.B. Yeats and Lady Gregory, staging Irish stories when being Irish wasn't trendy. It's where national identity gets three acts and an intermission.
25/40
What does St. Patrick's Day celebrate?
[C] The arrival of Christianity in Ireland | Commemorating how Patrick converted pagans using shamrock visual aids and presumably infinite patience. He turned Ireland Christian without social media or PowerPoint presentations.
26/40
What year was Leinster Rugby founded?
[D] 1879 | One of Ireland's oldest rugby clubs, proving the Irish have been professionally tackling each other for almost 150 years. Some traditions never get old.
27/40
Which Irish musician is known for "Galway Girl"?
[A] Ed Sheeran | The English singer wrote this Irish anthem, proving cultural appropriation sometimes produces bangers. Every pub band now has to know it or face disappointed drunk requests.
28/40
What were The Dubliners' original band name in the 1960s?
[B] The Ronnie Drew Ballad Group | Before becoming The Dubliners, they had the most literal band name ever. Marketing genius struck when they realized city names sell better than founder credits.
29/40
What are the three colors of the Irish flag represent?
[C] Catholics, Protestants, and peace | Green for Catholics, orange for Protestants, white for the peace between them that everyone's still working on. It's basically a flag-shaped wishful thinking.
30/40
What Irish slang term means to be broken or ruined?
[A] Banjaxed | When something's completely banjaxed, it's beyond repair—like your liver after a proper St. Patrick's Day celebration or Ireland's weather reputation.
31/40
What is the Gaelic word for a party or gathering with singing, dancing and storytelling?
[D] Ceilidh | A social gathering where everyone dances whether they know the steps or not. It's organized chaos with fiddle music and questionable coordination after midnight.
32/40
What other name is St. Patrick's Day known as?
[B] The Feast of St. Patrick | The religious name that nobody uses unless they're trying to justify day drinking to religious relatives. "It's a feast day, grandmother!"
33/40
According to legend, what animal did St. Patrick drive out of Ireland?
[D] Snakes | Scientifically impossible since Ireland never had snakes, but legends don't care about Ice Age geography. Patrick gets credit for solving a problem that didn't exist.
34/40
What's the tagline for the breakfast cereal Lucky Charms?
[A] They're magically delicious | Marshmallow shapes that have nothing to do with Ireland, marketed by a leprechaun stereotype. Cultural authenticity was never the goal here.
35/40
What Irish-Scottish band had a Top 10 hit with "Chasing Cars"?
[C] Snow Patrol | From Northern Ireland, they proved that lying on the ground contemplating life makes for radio gold. Every medical drama has used this song at least twice.
36/40
What is the oldest pub in Ireland?
[B] Sean's Bar | Dating to 900 AD in Athlone, it's been serving drinks for over a millennium. The original Yelp reviews were probably carved in stone.
37/40
What popular theater show featured Michael Flatley and Jean Butler step-dancing to traditional Irish music?
[B] Riverdance | This electrifying stage show turned traditional Irish step-dancing into a global phenomenon, proving that intense, synchronized leg movements are peak entertainment.
38/40
What 1959 Disney movie helped shape the modern image of a leprechaun?
[D] Darby O'Gill and the Little People | Disney's interpretation set the leprechaun template: tiny, tricky, and inexplicably willing to grant wishes. Sean Connery's singing debut nobody asked for.
39/40
Which breakfast cereal has "Lucky the Leprechaun" as its mascot?
[C] Lucky Charms | Since 1964, Lucky has been desperately protecting his cereal from kids, making him the worst security guard in advertising history.
40/40
According to Irish folklore, what will you find at the end of a rainbow?
[A] A pot of gold | The ultimate get-rich-quick scheme that requires finding something physically impossible to reach. Irish folklore's way of teaching physics through disappointment.