Marcellin Berthelot, Jacques-Antoine Chaptal, Antoine Lavoisier, Irène Joliot-Curie, Frédéric Joliot-Curie, Louis-Joseph Gay-Lussac, Louis Pasteur all were prominent French chemists.
Jean Jacques Cousteau
The Maginot Line.
There is a French individual whose name is Zola; a 19th century writer. Zola is an aka. His real name is Bonginkosi Dlamini.
Danone is the most famous brand name of yogurt in France. It is more a global brand now than a French one now, as Danone employs more Americans than French.
Seine, Marne, Oise, Somme, Loire, Garonne, Rhône, Adour, ...
Marie Curie was a French chemist. She is famous for her discovery of the element radium; her work paved the way for technology using radioactive substances.
Antoine is the French form of Anthony. One famous Antoine was Antoine Lavoisier, the chemist.
Pasteur
louis pastuer
from Finland's most famous chemist, Gadolin
Bunsen burner: invented by Robert Bunsen, German chemist Mekerburner: invented by Geoges Meker, French chemist Teclu burner: invented by Nicolae Teclu, Romanian chemist
The French word for chemist is "pharmacien."
Marie Curie is a famous physicist & chemist. In 1903 she was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics.
The element discovered in 1875 by a French chemist is Gallium. It was named after France, "Gallia" in Latin. Gallium is a soft, silvery metal with a low melting point.
French chemist Henri Moissan is credited with the discovery of the element fluorine, not Teflon (which is a trademarked name referring to a synthetic polymer called polytetrafluoroethylene). Teflon was discovered by Roy Plunkett, an American chemist, while working for DuPont in 1938.
Louis Pasteur is a famous chemist and microbiologist. His name begins with the letter l.
Assuming you're talking about the famous chemist/physicist, his full name was Lord Ernest Rutherford (1871-1937).