The Arc De Triomphe. its a huge arch in the middle of a traffic circle and there's a museum inside it and you can stand on top of it. unfortunately i didn't get to go inside it but i still saw it in person :)
Napoleon Bonaparte
I think its the Notre Dame ===================== The above is incorrect although I do not know the name of the arch you are referring to. You always see this arch during the end of the Tour de France cycling event and they refer to it often. Notre Dame is a gothic cathedral which has arches but this is not the large stone arch that you are asking about. ========================== L'arc de Triomphe
Yes, the term Gateway Arch is a proper noun, the name of a specific thing.
L'arc de Triomphe
carotid arch, systemic arch ,pulmocutaneous arch, cutaneous artery ,coeliaco mesentric artery, renal artery ,posterior mesentric artery, illiac artery.
This, the largest triumphal arch in the world, is the Arc de Triomphe de l'Étoile.
'le Drugstore' or 'le Drugstore des Champs-Élysées'
The Arc De Triomphe. its a huge arch in the middle of a traffic circle and there's a museum inside it and you can stand on top of it. unfortunately i didn't get to go inside it but i still saw it in person :)
The name of the street, Champs Elysees in Paris, means fields of elysee.
The French name refers to the ancient Greek mythology. It means roughly "the fields of the choosen"
13 streets i cant name them but those are the streats that lead thirteen for those who cant read numbers. But the Champs Elysees (street or road) is the longest one i know of.
isn't it the tour de France?
"le prix de l'Arc de Triomphe", these days "le Prix Qatar - Arc de Triomphe" is a prestigious horserace held annually in Paris. The name translates as "the Arc de Triomphe trophy / price". The Arc de Triomphe (English: the triumphal arch) is a large stone arch at the upper end of the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris.
There are certain streets around the world the are synonymous with fashion. These include Silk Street, Champs-elysees, Ermou Street, as well as Via Roma.
Eiffel tower, arch de triomph, Louvre, champs de lesalles, notre dame cathedral
The best-known "arc de triomphe" is a French monument in Paris. The name means "Triumphal Arch" in English, and comes from the Latin words "arcus" (arc, arch, bow) and "triumphus", so the monument is in fact named after its architecture and not after someone or by a special name.The Arc de Triomphe "de l'étoile" is named this because of its location (on the "star" square up the Champs-Elysees, while the Arc du Carrousel stands by the Louvre (a carrousel was a circle where horses where trained).It is pronounced "ark-duh-tree-omph (deh-ley-twa-ll)"
The name of the avenue was Champ Elysees.