Even though Canada is bilingual, only one province has French and English as their official languages. In Quebec they speak French as their first and everywhere else it is English
Speak French!
French and English
Canada first belonged to the french, then british. So Canadians are descended from either british or french. that is why many people in Canada speak French.
French Canadians
French and English
Layman's version: Vikings found Canada - Left English found Canada French found Canada French Settled in modern day Quebec English settled in modern day Newfoundland Wars/battles/skirmishes English now own Canada Canada decides to be independent. Because there are so many French people living in Canada (Quebec is almost exclusively French) and because the french culture is so ingrained into the Canadian Identity (the Acadien people) , both cultures begin to coexist. TADA!
french Canada
In Canada, most people speak French in the Quebec Territory.
Canada first belonged to the french, then british. So Canadians are descended from either british or french. that is why many people in Canada speak French.
Yes, people spoke French in Canada in 1910 and they still speak it there today in some areas.
catolic people and french people
Aborignal, British, French
As of 2014, about 22.3% of the population of Canada speak French as their native language.
the first people who came to Canada is the first nations or you can call them aboriginals.
most people speak English but there are french speaking people too
Most french people either go to Canada or Israel on vacations in the summer.
the french come from France. Also, the province of Quebec in Canada has an abundance of french people as well.
No, they are Canadian. Many people in the province of Quebec do, however, speak French, because they have history with the French.
Roughly 7.2 million people in Canada speak French as their first language, primarily in the province of Quebec but also in parts of other provinces. Additionally, over half a million Canadians speak French as a second language.