The author of the famous newspaper article J'accuse! was Emile Zola.
Pastry named after a French general would be "Napoleon."
Bugs Bunny is named the same in French.
You'd need to be more specific. I'm sure that there are many, many squares in France named after French generals (just like there are many in the US named after American generals and in the UK named after British generals).
the 250 grams bread stick is named in French 'une baguette'
Velcro
it was first made in america by a man named joseph french
It was named after the first person to wear one, who was a French man called Jules Léotard (1842-1870).
exploratour
A French explorer named Samuel de Champlian was the first European to set foot in what is now Vermont. The lake was later named after him.
Lake Erie
It is named for the French pediatrician, Antoine Marfan (1858-1942), who first described it in 1896.
"I am named French" would be "French (de Fréine) is sloinne dom".
The French horn was actually first created in Germany. I don't how it came to be named a French horn, but I know that the correct name is just "horn". So it was actually created in Germany.
Coriolis effect
Jules Verne, the French author, had one grandchild named Germaine Verne.
The first ship to be named 'Enterprise' was the French ship L'Entreprise. It was captured by the British Royal Navy in 1705 and renamed as HMS Enterprise.
He named himself 'First Consul' in 1799and he named himself emperor in 1804.Napoleon named himself First Consul. He did this to try to convince other European states to stop their opposition to the French Revolution.