Notre-Dame to the Louvre is a pleasant stroll. You could walk to the Eiffel Tower from there, but it's about 2 miles. Plenty to see on the way, though. The whole walk would make a good day's sightseeing.
The Gare du Nord is in Paris, a mile or so north of Notre-Dame.
As far as I know, the eternal Flame at the Arc has never been extinguished. The rekindling of the flame took place even under German occupation in WWII.
The entrance of the metro lines 1, 2, 6, and of the RER line A are just up the Champs Elysées avenue, 100 metres away from the Arc itself.
The distance between the Arc and the Musée de l'Orangerie, in the Tuileries gardens is 2.5 km (1.6 mile). The route goes down the Champs-Elysees avenue and across the Place de la Concorde.
80 kilometres to the Arc de Triomphe - that is about 01H10 in normal traffic conditions.
It's approximately: 2 Kilometers (1.25 miles) Its length is 1910m Its width is 70m STARTS: Place de la Concorde ENDS: Place Charles de Gaulle. +++++ The Champs-Elysees is in France! +++++
There is the Colosseum in Rome, Italy. There is the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France. There is Big Ben in London, UK. There is the Berlin Wall in Berlin, Germany. There is the Parthenon in Athens, Greece. There are many landmarks in Europe, these are just a few, famous examples.
Not too far; can be done by foot. Approximately 1.5 miles and downhill from the Arc to the Louvre. Easier by subway, two station stops. You walk down the Champs Elysee, past the Napoleon bridge to the right and the Grande & Petite Palaces, past the obelisk, through the Orangerie and the Garden of Tuilleries and there is the Louvre.
I crosses it.
As far as i know the title for a women is "DAME" . i know of one Ms. Dame Maggie Smith.
The "Far Arc Near Arc theorem" is used in finding the angle measures of a secant.