Calais.
Some French cities that start with the letter C include Cannes, Clermont-Ferrand, and Colmar.
No, French is not the official language of England. The official language of England is English.
No, French was not the official language of England. The official language of England has always been English.
The French word for England, "Angleterre," is feminine.
Some people in many parts of England speak French, because of France's proximity to the UK, people having French relatives, or being immigrants from Francophonie. There is no part of England where French is the commonly spoken language.
Calais belonged to England until 1558.
CalaisThe closest city would likely be Calais, on the English Channel.
Calais. The Channel Tunnel and many ferries go there.
calais. it was later lost to France when Mary 1 declared war and lost miserably. she said "when i die and you open me up, you will find calais in my heart".
La Marseilles
Marseilles
Marseilles
Major French ports:- on the Mediterranean sea: Marseille ( the busiest French port - English spelling: Marseilles), Sète, Nice.- on the English Channel: Le Havre (second-largest French sea port), Calais, Dunkerque (Dunkirk), Boulogne, Cherbourg, Dieppe.- on the Atlantic: Brest, Lorient (both naval military bases), La Rochelle.- (sizeable) river ports: Rouen (on the Seine river), Bordeaux (on the Gironde estuary).
Queen Mary I lost possession of Calais during a very unsuccessful war. It was the last of England's French holdings.
The French city is spelled Marseille.
le port de Calais
Well, Nottingham is in England so... But it's 320 miles from Nottingham to Paris, or roughly 188 miles to Calais which is the closest French city to England.