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There are many compound words in Irish that have been formed in this fashion. It's not breaking the rules at all although I can see why one could imagine so.
the déterminant-déterminé elements order is either Old Irish (1000 years ago, ie. not productive anymore) or English-influenced. It's not Modern Irish.
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príomhsráid/ reophointe/ scamallsparán/ galfchúrsa srl srl carrfholcadh is accepted also. Ó Ríordáin does it a lot in fact in a lot of his poetry
poetry is special. The everyday language and the poetry languages are completely different. In Poetry you can do almost anything, that you'd never say in the normal language.
Prìomhshràid is ok since "prìomh" is a prefixed adjective (like sean- etc).
The others you mentioned are in the English word order. "Accepted", yeah by those whose main language is English (or German etc). If English had never been spoken in Ireland, in Modern Irish nobody would ever have thought of putting elements in that order.
By the way, the Scottish Gaels seldom put elements in the English order in their new words, they keep closer to the Gaelic "mind" in that.