French Open
0 sources
French Open
Summary
French Open is a recurring tennis tournament[1]. It ranks in the top 0.48% of recurring_tennis_tournament entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,084 views/month, #3 of 620).[2]
Key Facts
- French Open is located in Paris[3].
- French Open is in the country of France[4].
- French Open's instance of is recorded as recurring tennis tournament[5].
- French Open's home venue is recorded as Stade Roland Garros[6].
- Roland Garros is named after French Open[7].
- French Open took place at Stade Roland Garros[8].
- French Open is a type of tennis tournament[9].
- French Open is part of Grand Slam[10].
- French Open's Commons category is recorded as French Open[11].
- French Open comprises Jacques Brugnon cup[12].
- French Open comprises Q136804936[13].
- French Open comprises Q136804933[14].
- French Open comprises French Championships – men's doubles[15].
- French Open comprises French Championships – women's doubles[16].
- French Open comprises French Open – mixed doubles[17].
- French Open comprises Q136804945[18].
- French Open comprises Q136804947[19].
- French Open comprises Q136804948[20].
- French Open comprises Q136804951[21].
- French Open comprises Q136805047[22].
- French Open comprises Q136805049[23].
- French Open comprises French Open – wheelchair men's doubles[24].
- French Open comprises French Open – wheelchair women's doubles[25].
- French Open comprises French Open – Wheelchair quad doubles[26].
- French Open comprises Q136805622[27].
Body
When and Where
The location of French Open was Stade Roland Garros[8]. It is in the country of France[4].
Context
French Open is part of Grand Slam[10]. Its instance of is recorded as recurring tennis tournament[5].
Why It Matters
French Open ranks in the top 0.48% of recurring_tennis_tournament entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,084 views/month, #3 of 620).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 97 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]