Sorta, yes.
An omelet is a french invention, vegetables, and /or meats and cheese, folded into a scrambled egg/cream mixture.
Chips, fried potatoes called frites in french, may or may not be a french invention initially but , thanks to Thomas Jefferson, who wrote about "potatoes fried in the french manner", are generally accepted as having been french in origin.
Therefore omelette and chips, though so designated by English cooks and gourmands, would most likely have its origins in France.
However, eggs and chips is most decidedly an English dish.
"une omelette jambon-fromage"
Crisps are called 'chips' in French. This is a feminine noun.
I believe it is England.
"les moules " is mussels and "les frites" is chips
French fries (American Term) are called chips in the UK. If you ask for chips in the US you will get what the British refer to as crisps.
They are called French fries because "to french something" is to cut it into thin slices. The French themselves don't call their fries "French".
'Les chips' is French for crisps.
No, potato chips are as American as apple pie.
the french do not eat fish and chips and so there is no phrase for it however fish = poisson and = et chips = pommes frites hope this helps
In French, the word for crisps (chips) is "les chips," which is masculine.
"Crisps" in French is spelled "chips".
"un paquet des chips" or just "des chips".