Sorry. There is no such town or village by the name of It France. So It is in no part of France.
Anywhere not in new france
no, new caledonia is still part of France.
Because it was part of france
yes it was
yes it was
The Quebecois accent comes from France's regions of Normandy, Brittany, and Perche, mostly derived from 17th-century French settlers. Over time, the accent evolved independently in Quebec, leading to distinct linguistic differences from European French.
None of them. There's Abbeville, which is named after a town in Northern France, and of course New Orleans is named after Orléans, which is in the centre of France, but not the same name.
New France or the Canadas.
France colony in North America was called New France. It spanned a large part of nowadays Canada, and a good part of the central eastern states of the US down to Louisiana.
Yes, the seigneur is a big part of new france because their jobs were to divide the land for the habitants, see the population of the people in New France that is on the seigneury. Without a seigneur none of those things can't be done.
Acadie