Canada is officially a bilingual country.
There are francophones [ French-Canadians ] throughout the country, but the Canadian province of Quebec is the home of the French-Canadian culture and thus is predominantly French speaking.
Provincial law dictated the removal of all English signs in order to try to protect its culture from becoming submerged in English.
Quebec is the Canadian province that speaks the most French, with French being the official language and the majority of the population having French as their first language.
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.
Every French province (we call them 'régions') speaks French. Regional languages (Corsican, Elsassich, ...) are rare and not in common use.
Most French-speaking Canadians live in the province of Quebec. Quebec is the only province in Canada where French is the official language and the majority of the population speaks French as their first language.
The most French-speaking province in Canada is Quebec, where French is the official language. The majority of the population in Quebec speaks French as their first language.
Quebec is the Canadian province that speaks the most French, with French being the official language and the majority of the population having French as their first language.
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.
Every French province (we call them 'régions') speaks French. Regional languages (Corsican, Elsassich, ...) are rare and not in common use.
Most French-speaking Canadians live in the province of Quebec. Quebec is the only province in Canada where French is the official language and the majority of the population speaks French as their first language.
The most French-speaking province in Canada is Quebec, where French is the official language. The majority of the population in Quebec speaks French as their first language.
Martin Brodeur speaks french because he is from Montreal in the province of quebec a province that is officially french, though there are lots of English people in Montreal it is what he learned as a first language -HDC
Martin Brodeur speaks french because he is from Montreal in the province of quebec a province that is officially french, though there are lots of English people in Montreal it is what he learned as a first language -HDC
Of course it's Quebec, it's the province where the majority of francophones live!!
Canada is the country that speaks the most French apart from France. French is one of the official languages of Canada, particularly in the province of Quebec. It is also spoken in other provinces and territories across the country.
Every province in Canada is french-speaking, however small the concentration of francophones (french first language) may be. Quebec does have the biggest population of francophones, but New Brunswick is the most truly bilingual province.
Yes, French is an official language of Canada. -------- No Canada is not a French speaking country. Outside of one province most of Canada speaks English and more Canadians speak Asian languages than French. For much of Canada French is the language of the colonizing Mother County
Most French-speaking Canadians live in the province of Quebec. The majority of the population in Quebec speaks French as their first language. Additionally, there are significant francophone populations in other provinces such as New Brunswick and Ontario.