bouclier
a shield is spelled "un bouclier" in French
The early settlers of the Canadian Shield were the French, English, Scottish, and British.
Bouclier canadien
The Guiana Shield is the area of uplands stretching from Venezuela to French Guiana. The higher elevations occuping much of the shield, are called the Guiana Highlands.
The Canadian Shield is a geographic formation in the north central, and slightly eastern area of Canada. If your question is actually how many people speak French and live on or near the Canadian Shield, there are a few, but not many. The majority of French speaking Canadians live either in the Province of Quebec, and the Province of Manitoba. While a reasonably sized chunk of the Shield does lay in Manitoba, it is not the portion of Manitoba that is largely French speaking. That being said, I am French Canadian, and I was born in a small town, right on top of the Canadian Shield :)
Assuming that you're referring to ice hockey, the French term for a goalie's blocker is a "bouclier" (shield), sometimes called a "plaque" (I assume this is a French Canadian term)
orieThat depends. A border that touches the edge of the shield all the way around is known by the Norman French name bordure. If the border is inset and away from the edge of the shield it is termed an orle.
Www.//handfield.ca web site, the man on the side of the shield is il legit child of king richard., the shield has claw of lion lion is detached, hoof of unicorn, shrouded by windsor family 'imperial bird' 'crown' replace the shield 'royal shield
Guyana, Suriname, and French Guiana are the countries formed from the Guiana Shield region in South America.
Saltire is a "heraldic" term and refers to a diagonal cross on a shield. This is often seen on old British coins where the shield may be a cruciform shield and the saltire a cross of sceptres of perhaps even swords, pikes or tridents. The term comes from 14th century Old French "sauteour", being a cross-shaped barricade.
The English word derives from the French one. In Norman French it meant the coat of arms painted either on a shield or on the façade of a castle or elsewhere. Obviously the meaning has evolved from the original one.
its a shield