Horsemeat has now been confirmed in some frozen lasagne on sale in France too.
He jokes that he is considered too young in France, but too old by his British counterparts in the Labour Party, which is led by a 41-year-old.
In France, too, the painful industrial restructuring of the past 15 years has started to bear fruit.
In France, too, Disney's proposal to construct a theme park outside Paris was scorned by intellectuals, who felt that by remaking the past the company was replacing it with something cheaper and inferior, but Disney went ahead anyway.
ECONOMIST: Some of the best tourist destinations are man-made
In France and Spain too, consolidation is stymied by specialist banks that distort competition.
The Belgian government said it had traced the contamination to feed from a company that supplied farms not only in Belgium but in France and the Netherlands too.
Many in France feel the EU has become too big, too open, too liberal and too English-speaking.
It feels a new small car aimed at the continental market stands a better chance of being driven in France if it is made there too.
The previous French attempt to regain a place at the top table of military planning collapsed in 1996, partly because France bid too high for senior commands.
Last week Mr Sarkozy said there were too many foreigners in France - and pledged to halve the number of immigrants arriving if he is re-elected later this year.
And we also pointed out that too many families -- too many families in France, the United States, Europe as a whole, are still suffering from underemployment as well as unemployment.
This equipment is starting to become available in other countries, too, including France and Germany.
Merloni bought Hotpoint in Britain, but walked away from Brandt in France, believing the group to be too complex and troubled.
Scotland's Six Nations opener in France on 5 February will certainly be too soon for Morrison, but he expects to play some part in the campaign.
He also still has the pace and athletic ability that made him a junior sprint and high jump champion on the Cote d'Azur and now, after two years playing regularly in France, he has regained his confidence too.
Germany and France have experienced problems in their banking sectors too, but unlike the UK, they have not had to intervene in the sector to the same extent.
Other countries have been more assiduous (some would say too assiduous) in doing so: France forbade schoolgirls to wear headscarves.
But they beat France 29-24 in the Plate semi-final and proved too strong for surprise package Tunisia in the final.
Italy didn't do too badly considering their resources and France were unrecognisable in the autumn from the side that won the Grand Slam last season.
Renault has too many European factories (it has nine big ones in France alone).
In that regard, Mr Fischer's proposals would push France to go too far, too fast for Mr Chirac's liking.
Sir Leon has his work cut out too, since most governments in the European Union, notably France's, wrongly blame cheap imports for high unemployment.
The problem of the celebrity press in France lies in the fact that magazines such as Closer, knowing all too well they'll be condemned and fined for invading people's lives, take it into account from the beginning and provision all legal costs in advance.
These days, too, there are plenty of young artists stirring the charts in France so many that it feels as though French music is in the process of reinventing itself.
He details rather too comprehensively for the lay person the intricacies of the tussles in France and Germany, but neglects almost completely other cold-war arenas Italy, Scandinavia, Japan and Yugoslavia, not to mention Africa, Asia and Latin America.
Doriot, as kind and smart and nurturing as he was, was perhaps too old fashioned or advanced in his career, which began in France in the early 20th century, to take venture capital to the next ambitious and empire-building step.
Yet Daniel Bouton, SocGen's boss, thinks that the two banks have too many overlapping branches to make such returns possible: in regulated France, you cannot simply close branches and sack people, which is, in part, how banks in America and Britain have increased returns.
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