Canada (qubec)
the province of Québec is mostly French-speaking
Jersey is not a country, but a crown dependency of Britain. French is an official language of Jersey, much of the law was recorded in French. Jerriais is the regional dialect, which is quite similar to French, however not many people can actually speak it anymore. English is the main language, our TV is english, radio, we talk to each other in English, schools teach in English.
Canada is a country. It doesn't contain any additional countries. If you are asking what provinces speak French, Québec has the largest French-speaking population, but French is official in all of the provinces. ---------- Canada is bilingual making French an official Canadian language but not the provinces. Only Manitoba and NB are bilingual, French English.
No, Chad is not a French-speaking country. The official languages of Chad are Arabic and French, with French being the language of administration and education.
In Canada, both English and French are the official languages of the country and it is law for one to be bilingual as passed by the Official Languages Act established in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. It is stated that 98.5% of Canadians speak English of French with 67.5% speaking English Only, 13.3% speaking French only, and 17.7% speaking both languages. Roughly, 30% of the country are French speaking Canadians...this could be approximated at 7 million Canadian French speakers in Canada, with most residing in Quebec.
there is only a French country, which is France. But there are several countries where the French language is spoken, which are French-speaking. The same goes for English and English-speaking: America is not English, but is English-speaking. Well I no that a French speaking country speaks French but not like France. For example:Haiti, and Morrocco are French speaking countries.
Anguilla is an English-speaking country.
Canadaalso French speaking
Nope... the official language of Gambia is English.
Because though generations, the people followed their parents' religions. French migrants were largely Roman Catholics, while settlers of English origin had a protestant background.
luxenburg is the same in french as it is in English. luxenburg is a German speaking country so there is no french translation.
the province of Québec is mostly French-speaking
Yes they did, otherwise Canada would be a French-speaking country.
The lower part of Canada was formed for French-speaking inhabitants.
Britain formed Lower Canada largely for French-speaking inhabitants.
Britain formed Lower Canada largely for French-speaking inhabitants.
England isn't a french speaking country...