It is Seine
(Sierra, if you read this, I am Steph.... I ANSWERED SOMETHING!)
See, I help people cheat.
Seine is the answer! :)
The Loire River flows through northwest France and forms an important trade area. It is the longest river in France.
Seines
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 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 river is the Rhine, but you have it flowing backward. It begins in Switzerland, flows north along the France-Germany border, through Germany, then northwest through the Netherlands where most of its water passes through the distributary Rivier Waal to Rotterdam.
The 3 most important ones:- La Muese- Scheldt- Yseralso:- Leie- Semois
It flows through Paris.
The Rhone River originates in the Swiss Alps and flows into the Mediterranean Sea. It flows through France and passes the cities of Avignon, Arles and Marseille.
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 Rhine starts in Switzerland, flows to the German border, forms the border between Germany and France, flows into Germany, then to the Netherlands, and finally into the North Sea. So, counting France, that's four. It also borders on Liechtenstein and Austria, so that makes 6. But if you are being pedantic about "run through" and excluding countries it merely borders, then the answer is 3.
France
France.