French is the language which the French speak, particularly in France. French is used as a noun twice here. The first time it names the language. The second time it names the people.
Some countries of seven letters where French is an official language would be Belgium, Senegal, Burundi, Comoros & Vanuatu.
There are none. By definition, French countries speak French.
First of all not all names in a certain language have their equivalent in another language,and Anita is not english, it's french ,so therefore you cannot translate it.
"Lucas" is a French first name, but first names have sometimes turned last names, so it's possible.Using first names as last names is the closest thing to the "Peterson" or "Petersen" equivalent for French, since we don't have this "son of Peter" notation.
"le français" is masculine. Actually, all language names I can think of are masculine in French.
No. In the US and all other countries using the English Language and most countries using other European languages, the first name is the personal name and the last names are family names. The word "surname" is another way of saying "family name."
In French, "Égypte" is a feminine noun, so it is referred to as "la Égypte." This gender classification is typical for geographical names in the French language, where countries and regions can be either masculine or feminine.
Ulysses, either way names are the same in the french language
Riley is a name and a general rule is that names are not translated so it stays the same, Riley.
Belgium and Switzerland have a large French population. The tiny countries Monaco and Luxembourg speak French too.
yes the elephant