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No, Laos is not a French-speaking country. The official language of Laos is Lao. French used to be a colonial language during the French colonial period but is not widely spoken in Laos today.
The province of Quebec in Canada primarily speaks French. It is the only province where French is the official language. However, there are also French-speaking communities in other provinces, such as New Brunswick and parts of Ontario.
French is mainly spoken in the province of Quebec in Canada.
French has been spoken in Switzerland for several centuries. It became one of the four official languages of the country in 1938, along with German, Italian, and Romansh. The French-speaking region of Switzerland, known as Romandy, is located mainly in the western part of the country.
the masai of Kenya speak maa. this is mainly a speaking language...not a writing language.
No, Laos is not a French-speaking country. The official language of Laos is Lao. French used to be a colonial language during the French colonial period but is not widely spoken in Laos today.
Because the Europeans who settled and colonized (some areas of) Canada were mainly from France. This created french-speaking areas that have remained until today. Most French-speaking people you meet in Canada aren't french, they're Canadians. French-speaking, but still very much Canadians. 'Course, if you're French speaking, and looking for another place to live, another french speaking nation would make the transition easier. If you don't speak good english, Canada would be easier than, say Alaska.
Nadege is originally Russian, meaning hope, it is mainly used in France and other French speaking countries.
When Colonel Fiorelli invaded Morocco in 1657 and claimed it as a French colony. They killed the natives and brought volunteers to Morocco to live there and build a French empire. Now they speak mainly french.
Quebec is different from the rest of canada, because Quebec has more of an expansion of french speaking people while everywhere else has a mixture, mainly because french people first migrated in Quebec
The vast majority of us are located in the province of Quebec, which is a French-speaking province, primarily, with some English speaking people living there. Montreal is fairly bilingual, however the rest of the province is mainly French only. The second most populated region of French Canadians is in the capital of the province of Manitoba, which is Winnipeg. The French quarter of Winnipeg is called St. Boniface. After that, there are little pockets of French throughout the country, in virtually every province.
The province of Quebec in Canada primarily speaks French. It is the only province where French is the official language. However, there are also French-speaking communities in other provinces, such as New Brunswick and parts of Ontario.
Mainly its difficulty for example i french 2 you shouldn't be making many mistakes since you took french one unless you just barely passed in french 3 you should be at a higher level in spseaking french and should be speaking it more fluently
mainly in Canada's Ontario toronto, brampton and Mississauga.
A big part of the population is located in Ontario mainly around the Toronto and the greater Toronto area.
Like Americans, they watch a variety of different movies from many different cultures. So they watch French movies and American movies with the characters speaking french or french subtitles.
by eating,sleeping mainly, they live in bigger citys such as Toronto.