British, Welsh, Scots are undiscriminately refered to as "les anglais", a little less for the Scots to be true.
A well-known fact is that "les anglaises sont rousses avec des grandes dents" (all Englishwomen are red-haired with big teeth)
The popular and familiar nickname for English people is "les rosbifs" from the noun roast-beef that some French found funny-sounding - the perfect idea of the way English pronounce words when talking to foreigners.
England is called "Angleterre" (feminine noun) in French.
french people
les français
les Anglais (les rosbifs)
l'Angleterre
Frogs
French
The French call it La Manche (the sleeve).
Douvres is the French name for the town port of Dover.
They are called Gabonese in English, Gabonaise in French, the official language.
Comment s'appelle ta mère? in French is "What's your mother's name?" in English.
The English Channel. The French call it Le Manche.
The French call the English "les Rosbifs" The English call the French "Froggies" It is interesting that both are food related.
the French also call it internet.
If you are referring to the area of the English countryside, the French call it "le Lake District".
The English port of Dover is called Douvres in French
Pelican is spelled the same in English and french
The English Channel is called "la Manche" in French. (Perhaps this is because the shape resembles a broomstick or shirt sleeve, two other meanings of the word.)
The English call it The English Channel. The French call it La Manche
"To call trendy" is an English equivalent of the French phrase appeler tendance. The pronunciation will be "a-pley taw-dawss" in French.
The French term "DEJA vu" in English is "already seen".
The English call this the 'English Channel', the French call it 'la Manche' (the sleeve). The rest of the British people call it the 'English Channel' as well.
"Call me" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Appelez-moi.Specifically, the imperative appelez means "(you) call." The emphatic personal pronoun moi means "me." The pronunciation will be "ah-pley-mwah" in French.
Skipping Stones.