Tunisie ( I believe its Tunisia in french is also feminine so its La Tunisie)
Because Tunisia was once a french colony and before that was part of the Arabian empire.
Tunisia used to be a French colony until the late 1950s and the French introduced French as the language for education and government and this continues today.
TUNISIA controls Tunisia. It is an independent country and has been since 1956. Tunisia has strong economic ties with France, but France does not exert any strong political influence in Tunisia beyond what the Tunisian people want from the French government.
Because Tunisia is a former French colony - Parce que la Tunisie est une ancienne colonie française.
Of course! French in Tunisia has been influenced by Arabic and Berber languages, so there's a slightly different accent and some minor different vocabulary. A parallel might be Canadian French and French French.
The word Tunisia is derived from Tunis, a central urban hub and the capital of modern-day Tunisia. The present form of the name with its Latinate suffix, -ia evolved from French Tunisie.
Georges Wolinski was born on June 28, 1934, in French Protectorate Tunisia [now Tunisia].
Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco speak French.
Bob Ingarao was born on January 2, 1916, in Tunis, French Protectorate Tunisia [now Tunisia].
Michel Boujenah was born on November 2, 1952, in Tunis, French Protectorate Tunisia [now Tunisia].
Georges Flamant was born on September 3, 1903, in Tunis, French Protectorate Tunisia [now Tunisia].