Are princes from French non-reigning families called "highness" in France? Like SAS?
No. French princes of non-sovereign families were not Highnesses (SA) or Serene Highnesses (SAS).
As the title Duke is above that of Prince, it would be dukes who might be expected to be SAS but only one French duke is: The Duc de Broglie is SAS as he is a Reichsfürst. His title comes from the HRE and, in any case, the family was not originally French.
The Prince-Duke of Bauffremont-Courtenay is French but the princely title is also of the HRE (awarded in 1757). However, he is not addressed as Serene Highness.
La Marck, de la Trémoille, La Tour d’Auvergne and Rohan were recognised as “foreign princes” in France and acknowledged as Highness. All these families, except Rohan, are extinct; however, the remaining branch of the Rohan family is no longer French, having emigrated to Habsburg Austria where the head of the family was awarded the title Fürst von Rohan and the qualification Durchlaucht (Serene Highness).
Those Napoleonic generals who were made sovereigns became Highnesses, qualifications that were no longer recognised after 1815. Only three of those families survive: Lannes (Prince of Siewierz), Bernadotte (Prince of Ponte Corvo, later Kings of Sweden) and the Princes Murat (Grand Duke of Berg, later King of Naples). All members of the Murat family were confirmed as Highness (SA) under Napoléon III.
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