1. conscription never appealed to francophone because they did not feel devotion to britain so when they voted no to conscription the gonvernment went against them which angered them.
2. FLQ terrerist group that wanted quebec to seperate from Canada
3. bill 101 was introduced which strengthened the french language in quebec
4.quebec felt like they needed for power with the amending formula as quebec felt the charter would override the language laws which issues were not resolved in the kitchen accord.
5. the notwithstanding clause enables changes if 7/10 provinces with 50% of canada s population witch excluded quebec if Ontario was included
Winnie Roach Leuszler was the first Canadian to swim the English Channel.
yes yes there is There is a lion and a unicorn on the Canadian coat of arms. The lion represents the English, the Unicorn the French.
He is, but only by place of birth, (Montreal, Quebec). His father is Italian, his mother is Irish-Canadian and he is fluent in English, Italian and French.
Nobody. The English borrowed the Latin alphabet in the 8th or 9th Century, and then modified it to fit the sounds of English.___English uses the Latin alphabet, which in turn developed from the Greek alphabet. That in turn developed from various alphabets in use in the Mediterranean region ... Nobody invented the alphabet.Nobody. It was invented. Alpha and beta are A and b in ancient Greek. ___ English uses the Roman alphabet, which in turn developed from the Greek alphabet. That in turn developed from various alphabets in use in the Mediterranean region ... Nobody invented the alphabet.
The Elizabethan period
John English - Canadian politician - was born in 1945.
21 Canadian dollars is 12.14 English pounds.
No, Isaac Newton was not Canadian. He was English.
It is "labeled" in American English and "labelled" in British and Canadian English.
Canadian English and British English share many similarities, but there are some key differences. These differences can be seen in vocabulary (e.g. "garbage can" vs. "rubbish bin"), spelling (e.g. "color" vs. "colour"), and pronunciation (e.g. the pronunciation of the "ou" sound in words like "out" or "house"). Additionally, Canadian English is influenced by both British and American English due to historical ties with both countries.
Jean Pariseau has written: 'French Canadians and bilingualism in the Canadian Armed Forces' -- subject(s): Armed Forces, Bilingualism, English-French relations, History, Minorities
Louis Balthazar has written: 'French-Canadian civilization' -- subject(s): Description and travel, English-French relations, French-Canadians, History, Nationalism, Social conditions
He is Canadian, he speaks English.
Rob McLennan has written: 'Decalogue 2' -- subject(s): Canadian Short stories, Canadian fiction, Canadian fiction (English), Short stories, Canadian (English)
The main differences between Canadian English and British English are in spelling, vocabulary, and pronunciation. While Canadian English follows more closely to American English in terms of spelling and vocabulary, there are still some British English influences present. Pronunciation in Canadian English also tends to be more similar to American English than British English.
they say hello in English because I'm from there and we don't speak Canadian we speak English
they say hello in English because I'm from there and we don't speak Canadian we speak English