A) France wanted to get rid of monarchies in Europe. B) France wanted to weaken its long-time enemy, England. C) Eventually, France wanted to claim all lands in North America. D) The United States and France planned to create an empire.
Benjamin Franklin was the first person to represent the United States in England and France. Arthur Lee and Silas Deane were also ambassadors to England and France at the same time.
France ,Europe and England
France and the United States both had significant conflict leading to more democratic political orders and societies. In England, democracy evolved out of the unwritten constitution and various acts of Parliament over the years- there was no revolution
Germany, England, France, and Italy
Mostly shades of Christianity. Protestant in England and the central states and Catholic in France.
In 1750 there was no United States, so the colonies did not have their own coins. They had coins from Europe; England, Spain, France, etc.
Outside of the United States of America where democracy was first most prominently displayed; most of the countries of Western Europe as well as South and Central America are democratic republics. England is a Constitutional Monarchy (it has a Queen, as do some others,) but functionally acts as a democracy. England Ireland France Germany Italy Greece Brazil Argentina Uruguay Are some examples.
Wow. Paris is a city in France. France is a country in Europe. Europe is a continent located on the opposite side of a very big ocean from the United States. So the answer is no.
france - apex
A) France wanted to get rid of monarchies in Europe. B) France wanted to weaken its long-time enemy, England. C) Eventually, France wanted to claim all lands in North America. D) The United States and France planned to create an empire.
Are you serious? France is a country of Europe.
FRANCE
In 1939, the two democratic states in Europe were France and the United Kingdom. Both countries had established parliamentary systems and were characterized by multi-party politics. They were also key players in opposing the rise of totalitarian regimes in Germany and Italy during that period. Other European nations were either authoritarian or under fascist rule at the time.
North America - United States South America - Brazil Europe - France Africa - Democratic Republic Of The Congo Asia - India Oceania - New Zealand
yes.
Of course not, Elizabethan England was protestant.