French navy refers to the specific navy of France.
Navy may refer to any countries navy.
The French Fusiliers Marins are part of the navy. Like all other sailors they wear the navy's uniform. You can see a sailor is a fusilier marin by two part of uniform : two crossed rifles on the right sleeve (red for sailors, gold for nco) and in parade unifoem, on the hat, the name of the unit...
army-responsible on land navy-responsible at sea
Norman French refers to the variety of Old French spoken in the Norman region of France, which influenced the English language after the Norman Conquest in 1066. Parisian French, on the other hand, is the standard French spoken in Paris and considered the prestige dialect in France. While both share similarities, Norman French has distinct phonetic and lexical differences compared to Parisian French.
royal blue is light and navy blue is dark
There's no difference their both under the Department of the Navy.
The spelling
The main difference is how they ended. The French got their way and were a free people; no royalty needed. The Americans also got their way, but at the end of their revolution came the treaty of Paris. Another big difference is military warfare. The french had helped the Americans with nearly 90% of their gunpowder, and had supported a Navy (without the French supporting them, the Americans wouldn't have had a Navy). The French nearly crippled themselves financially helping the Americans.
THAT'S EASY! liquid navy blue has the word liquid in it
Nothing - Department of the Navy is the formal title for the Pentagon division that encompasses the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Marine Corps. Navy Department is an informal term.
The French have more croissants.
None, to my knowledge..........................
There is no difference, because France is in Europe, so French are Europeans, but Europeans are not French. So, basically, the beginning was a lie, because there IS a difference.