The Seine River runs in Paris and flows into the English channel
The Seine River flows between Paris and the English Channel. It flows from Paris through several French cities that include Normandy before entering the English Channel.
The Seine river flows into the English channel in Le Havre, 200 km west of Paris.
The Seine flows through Paris and eventually empties into the English Channel. The channel separates Britain from France.
The Seine, which flows through Paris, flows into the Channel at Le Harvre.
The Seine river, flows through Paris, and northeast of France towards Le Havre, a seaport on the English channel. It is France second-longest river, with 777 km (480 miles).
No river flows through Lyon and on to the English Channel. The Saone flows into the Rhone at Lyons, and the Rhone flows into the Mediterranean Sea, which is the complete opposite direction from Lyons than the English Channel is.
No. It's on a river which flows into the English Channel 200 miles downstream.
The River Thames flows through southeastern Great Britain to the English Channel.
The river that flows through England and France is the River Seine. It runs through northern France and flows through Paris before eventually emptying into the English Channel.
The English Channel does not flow into any river. It is a sea link between the Atlantic Ocean and the North Sea. See the related questions section, below, for the answer to which river flows into the English Channel.
Well, it starts in the English Channel and goes through Paris, Rouen, and Troyes. It ends near Dijon. No it doesn't. The source of the River Seine is at Sainte-Seine-L'Abbaye in the Côte d'Or, it flows down through Troyes, Melun, Paris, Rouen and flows into the Atlantic Ocean at Le Havre http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seine