The answer is the Seine river.
There is more than one! The three most important:
La Muese (flow further through The Netherlands)
Scheldt (also flow further through The Netherlands)
L'Yser
And then you have different side-rivers. The ones I know:
- Leie
- Semois
The Seine is the river which flows through Paris and divides the city into the 'right' and 'left' banks respectively.
River Seine
River Seine
The river that flows through England and France is the River Seine. It runs through northern France and flows through Paris before eventually emptying into the English Channel.
It flows through Paris.
Paris, France
in France from the river source to the mouth, this river flows through Paris.
The Rhone and Seine rivers flow through France.
Yser River starts in Northern France and flows through Belgium to the North Sea
There are four major rivers in France: the Seine, which flows through Paris and northwest to the English Channel, the Rhone, which starts in the Alps and flows south to the Mediterranean, and the Loire and the Garonne, which both start in central France and flow west to the Atlantic. The Loire is the longest river in France.
The Seine River flows through France, though it may seem big enough to flow through many countries, it does only flow through the one and only France.
The River Seine runs through Paris, France.
The Seine is the second longest river in France. It rises 18 miles northwest of Dijon and flows in a northwesterly direction through Paris before it empties into the English Channel at Le Havre.
The Seine flows through Paris and eventually empties into the English Channel. The channel separates Britain from France.
The Seine River