I live in Ireland so it's English for pretty much everything.
Sadly, Irish people should be by rights bi-lingual; the Irish language is spoken by very few people in the periphery of Ireland, despite the fact that every child born of Irish citizens in the country must learn the language when they start attending school.
It's forced down people's throats and I absolutely hated it until I went to an Irish speaking area for a three week course in the oral aspect of it (the major school leaving exam awards 25% for spoken Irish) and I fell in love with it.
I loved communicating, however poorly at first, in my own native tongue.
I'm one of those people who also did French but my teacher was atrocious and it bored the shit out of me, so, je suis tré désole, mais mon Francais est trés faible.
I probably just gave you a hernia the spelling and grammar is so bad
A second language is sort of superfluous in Ireland when we're an island part of the Atlantic Atlantic English speaking community of the the UK and the US to either side of us. It is not, however, a bad thing to be multilingual.
Sorry, Europe, but the way we've been treated by Sarkozy and Merkel over the last year has turned me against the idea that my country's future lies exclusively inside the European project.
Don't get me wrong, I've nothing against the EU, or our French, German, Spanish, Italian etc friends, I just think that in Ireland's case, European languages have never been to the fore as regards education policy for the simple reason that the English speaking culture is more embedded here.