Not 100% sure. However, as Napolean was born in Corsica I would have to almost be certain that his 'native' language would have been corsican. Corsican is the traditional native language of the Corsican people, and was long the sole language of the island, which was acquired by France in 1768. However, once he started school he was schooled in French.
Corsica is a large island in the Mediterranean. The laws there are the same than in mainland France, but the regional council had been granted a (slightly) larger degree of autonomy than a regular French region. People speak French, a small proportion of the elderlies also speak Corsican. This is a beautiful place where the seaside had been protected from the ugly tourist accomodation you may see on other shores.
Approximately 22% of the population in Switzerland speak French as their first language.
The people that participated in the French and Indian war were the British and french
the Corsicans are called 'les corses' in French. (works as a masculine and feminine noun: un corse, une corse)
It isn't. French is the native tongue for many people in Quebec and New Brunswick as well as small pockets in Alberta, but the majority of Canadians speak English.
french trappers married native American women and then France built strong allainces with native American groups like the alogonquins and the Huron people hope this helps (:
French. ===== Ummm, I think the people of the First Nations were here long before the French arrived -- thousands of years before the French arrived.
In 2014, approximately 21% of the Canadian population reported French as their mother tongue, and around 30% reported being able to conduct a conversation in French. This makes French one of the two official languages in Canada, alongside English.
Anthems are sung to honor one's native land/country.
people had better stuff :P
they supplied boats, guns, horses, men, and animals to protect them.