Talleyrand
Talleyrand.
The French leader at the Munich conference was, in fact, a man named Edouard Daladier.
I attended school at = je suis allé à l'école à ...
Talleyrand
International in English is the same in French.
the yalta conference.
During World War II, the coastal city of Casablanca (in French Morocco, as the region was then called) provided the site for an international conference of Allied leaders. Taking place in January of 1943, the conference hosted talks among British, American, and French leaders.
The four world leaders, known as the "Big Four"—U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, British Prime Minister David Lloyd George, French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau, and Italian Prime Minister Vittorio Orlando—attended the Versailles Peace Conference to negotiate the terms of peace following World War I. Each leader aimed to address national interests, secure territorial gains, and establish a framework for preventing future conflicts. Wilson advocated for the League of Nations and self-determination, while Clemenceau sought to impose harsh reparations on Germany. The conference ultimately shaped the geopolitical landscape of Europe and set the stage for future international relations.
Munich ConferenceMunich Conference
The Czechs were not invited to the Munich conference by the British or French. The British and French though that the Czechs would not help make a deal with Hitler.
CCTV International French was created in 2007.
"international (e)"