No, they aren't. But the name derives from the time when Napoleon's troops invaded Switzerland in 1798... Nowadays there aren't any french francs anymore - as France adopted the "Euro" as currency of the European Union.
France is the country, french is the language France is a noun. French is an adjective in most useage. "I like French fries".
he sailed for the french. he was from France. (same thing...)
French same as in France
France is a country and the French capital is a city named Paris.
In French, you spell the word France the same way as you would in English: "France." Though spelled the same, the word is pronounced differently among the languages. France, officially the French republic, is a country in western Europe commonly referred to as l'Hexagone (meaning "The Hexagon" in English) due to its geographic shape.
the same as english.
Nicole is spelled the same in English as it is in France. France does not change the spelling of a name.
French Guiana is a French oversea "département", i.e. a French administrative subdivision on exactly the same model as exist in mainland France. French Guiana is part of France and has the same rights and laws.
No. French come from France and the Dutch come from Holland.
French guiana is part of France. It is not an independent country, nor is it a colony (says the UN). It is a French overseas region, with the very same laws as mainland France, and the same currency, the euro.
It is the same as francomania; the craze or obsession with France and the French.
Same as in France French Je t'aime.