La Martinique, la Guadeloupe are French islands in the Carribbean. Corsica is a large island in the Mediterranean, la Réunion is another in the Indian ocean.
The term French West Indies or French Antilles(French: Antilles françaises) refers to the seven territories currently under French sovereigntyin the Antilles islands of the Caribbean:The two overseas departments of: Guadeloupe(Basse-Terre and Grande-Terre)MartiniqueThe two overseas collectivities of: Saint MartinSaint BarthélemyThe islands forming dependencies of Guadeloupe, namely Les SaintesMarie-GalanteLa DésiradeDue to proximity French Guiana is often associated with the French West Indies, such as in the University of the French West Indies and Guiana.
besides France, in Canada the province of Quebec speaks French, and in the US, the state of Lousiana has a lot of French-speaking natives. A lot of small islands speak French. I think there are a few countries in Africa that also speak a form of French. Oh, and Haiti speaks a form of it as well. It's a little bit different, but its roots are in French.
The two successive Berber Dynasties of Morocco were the Almoravids (المرابطون) and the Almohads (الموَحدون) controlled the entirety of Morocco and ruled it as Islamic Dynasties.However, the dynasty that united Morocco under Islamic Rule was the Arab Umayyads. The first Islamic Moroccan Kingdom was the Arab Idrissids (الأدارسة). Not soon after the foundation of the Idrissid Caliphate, a small Berber region of Tamesna revolted an established the Barghawata Emirate (إمارة بورغواطة). While this was the first Berber Kingdom in Morocco, it never unified Morocco.
'cinquante-deux'
In French, "I have two sisters" is translated as "J'ai deux soeurs."
La Guadeloupe and La Martinique are two large French islands in the Carribbean. There are also smaller French islands nearby.
French Polynesia, Wallis and Futuna
the golden answerFalkland and french Guiana
Two groups of islands in the South Pacific that are French overseas territories are New Caledonia and French Polynesia.
La Guadeloupe and La Martinique are two French islands in the Carribbean.
la Martinique (in the Carribbean) and Saint-Pierre et Miquelon (near Canada) are examples of French islands.
The term French West Indies or French Antilles(French: Antilles françaises) refers to the seven territories currently under French sovereigntyin the Antilles islands of the Caribbean:The two overseas departments of: Guadeloupe(Basse-Terre and Grande-Terre)MartiniqueThe two overseas collectivities of: Saint MartinSaint BarthélemyThe islands forming dependencies of Guadeloupe, namely Les SaintesMarie-GalanteLa DésiradeDue to proximity French Guiana is often associated with the French West Indies, such as in the University of the French West Indies and Guiana.
I'm not sure of the second, but Canada was under French rule (named new France) for almost two hundred and fifty years.
The French lost the French and Indian War. France retained two islands in Canada, Haiti, a few islands in the Caribbean, and a sliver of South America.
Vehicles traveling under normal conditions must adhere to the two-second rule.
No, Bora Bora is not in Tahiti. Both are in fact two separate islands in the French Polynesia. Tahiti is the largest of these islands.
St. Pierre and Miquelon