The seasons are reversed - when it is summer in France, it is winter in Australia; and when it is winter in France, it is summer in Australia. Australia is further north than France is south so the climate of Australia is warmer overall than that of France. Australia has an equivalent latitude range to Spain and Algeria. Much of Australia has a warmer and dryer climate than France. It snows only in the mountains in the southern parts of Australia and in Tasmania. However, since Australia is much larger than France and has many different climates across the country, you could find comparable weather to France in the summer somewhere in northern Australia when it is winter.
The US has a total area of about 9, 826,675 square kilometers, France has about 674,843 square kilometers. Dividing the US's by France's give you a quotient of about 14.56.So, the US is around fourteen and a half times largerthan France.
Francois Delattre is the Ambassador to the US for France.
France's area is about 555,000 sq kilometers. Compared to US states, it is smaller than Texas (very similar if you take the French oversea possessions into account), but larger than California.
US and France are both on the Northern hemisphere, so they have the seasons.
Nothing. There is no border between the US and France.
France is much smaller than the US.
France's goals for the post war settlement differ from the U.S because France wanted to prevent Germany from becoming a world power. And the U.S wanted to keep Britain from falling apart
The poverty rate in France is lower than in the US.
belly buttons and bananars
There is a cold ocean current off the US west coast, which creates a cooler climate.
because of the cold climate
Yes, much more than in the US.
California.
Yes, a US citizen needs a visa to travel to France for stays longer than 90 days. For stays less than 90 days, US citizens can travel to France without a visa under the Visa Waiver Program.
France is roughly the size of Texas, much smaller than the United States.
In some parts that is so, but not everywhere. Don't forget Canada is a vast area.
France doesn't actually have more MW than the US, but it has a higher percentage of its total electricity output. Thus France relies on about 75 percent nuclear and the US 19 percent, but the US economy is much bigger and its total electricity supply is correspondingly much bigger. I don't have all the figures but the US has 104 operating reactors and France has about 50