I am from France, but I moved to Canada.
Vive la France!
"Long live France!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Viva la France! The feminine singular phrase models a difference between the two languages whereby Italian puts definite articles -- la, in this case -- before countries even though English does not. The pronunciation will be "vee-va law fawns" in French.
la langue de la langue françaiseIn English we do not say "the language of French." We say the "language of France," or the "French language." La langue française, in either case.
There's no one word as in English meaning 'home' in French. 'Chez moi' is my home, 'chez vous' is your home, 'a la maison' is at home.
"Bonjour la France" translates to "Hello France" in English. It is a common greeting used to say hello to France or to greet someone from France.
I am from France, but I moved to Canada.
In French, you say "France" as "France."
To say "I am from France" in French, you would say "Je viens de France."
You would say "Vive la France" in French, which translates to "Long live France."
La langue anglaise (English language) or just anglais (English) Je parle anglais. Parlez-vous anglais? I speak English. Do you speak English?
You say "La Belle France"
j'aime la France
the family is spelled 'la famille' in France. The meaning is the same as in English.
La langue anglaise (English language) or just anglais (English) Je parle anglais. Parlez-vous anglais? I speak English. Do you speak English?
Was France good? = La France était bien? or La France était-elle bien?
The capital of France is Paris (English) -> La capitale de la France est Paris (French)