Canada was created by the British North America Act (now the Constitution Act) on July 1, 1867, thereby becoming the first country to be created by legislation.
(Note: The word "dominion" was never part of Canada's name. It was merely a term of description.)
Canada became a country on July 1, 1867. The term "dominion" is a historical reference to Sec. 3 of the British North America Act which states "one dominion under the name of Canada". Canada was never officially called "The Dominion of Canada".
Canada officially became a country on July 1, 1867 with the passing of the British North America Act (BNA) by the British Parliament. The first provinces were Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick. The term "Dominion" is simply a historical reference to Section 3 of the BNA: "one dominion under the name of Canada". Canada was never known officially as "The Dominion of Canada", even though it was incorrectly labeled such at times.
My advice. Look it up on e-bay. Even if you don;t have an account
No. The French first settled there in 1605 followed by the British in 1763. In 1867 it became the Dominion of Canada. It is a member of the British Commonwealth. While Canada has the British Crowned Monarch as the head of state the Government of Canada is independent, autonomous and equal to the British Government, Australian Government or French Government.
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/168787/dominion-theory
there was a descent called Indians, they are the native Americans. they were lived in tents and eating animals. America was a big land contains forests,hills,valeys,rivers,and wild animals.
It is not a "dominion" it is a Confederation of Nations.
The 'Dominion of Canada ' has never moved. Early Canada is only enlarged by the addition of the western provinces.
Canada became a country ("one dominion under the name of Canada") on July 1, 1867.
Same thing. Before Canada Day it was called Dominion Day.
Dominion of Canada General Insurance Company was created in 1887.
Canada officially became a country on July 1, 1867. The first provinces were Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick. (The term "Dominion" is simply a historical reference to Section 3 of the British North America Act: "one dominion under the name of Canada". Canada was never known officially as "The Dominion of Canada". It found its way into popular venues such as paper currency and school maps. However, on Canadian bills it was meant as "The Dominion Under Canada" and on school maps as "The Queen's Dominion of Canada".)
Canada officially became a country on July 1, 1867. The first provinces were Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick. The term "Dominion" is simply a historical reference to Section 3 of the British North America Act: "one dominion under the name of Canada". Canada was never known officially as "The Dominion of Canada".
nothing
France
The word "dominion" was never part of Canada's name. It was merely a term of description. Why the word "dominion" was chosen to describe Canada is the subject of a few legends, none of which have any evidence to support them. The word "dominion" was in common use in the days of Confederation and for a few centuries prior to that. There was a "Dominion of New England" and also a "Dominion of Virginia" as well as a few others. The word "dominion" was used in conformity with its prior uses.
Toronto Dominion as in Toronto Dominion Bank, Canada
the french word for "found" is "trouver" [sounds like]TRU-V-EH