The answer is actually what you are looking at when you say "smaller." Canada is bigger than the US when it comes to land, however, the US has a much bigger population than Canada, forwarding to what you are talking about.
Well, it's either every year or everyday...
No not all provinces and territories are the same size. Some are bigger and others are much smaller.
how much ticket canada
As noted in the expert answers: Canada has a larger surface area than the USA. Canada has a much smaller population than the USA. With 3 expert answers, this can be retired from the featured questions.
Canada is about 42% smaller than Russia.
The fur trade did not so much change Canada, as create Canada. Furs were the first resource sold internationally, the first "gold" that brought Europeans, and then the world to Canada.
The Canada population is much smaller compared to its land area.
Greece has about 1/3 of Canada's population, and about 1% of Canada's area. So Greece is much smaller in both regards.Greece:- population 11,305,118- area 131,990 km2Canada:- population 34,440,000- area 9,984,670 km2
Canada is bigger than China in terms of area, but is much smaller in terms of population.
Say you live in Canada and the government is trading with other countries. It is a comparison between how much you trade to how much you sell. If you trade more then you sell then that's a trade deficit. You basically owe money.
The answer is actually what you are looking at when you say "smaller." Canada is bigger than the US when it comes to land, however, the US has a much bigger population than Canada, forwarding to what you are talking about.
about 15$$$
It is important for canada to trade with japan because canada has lots of agricultural products ( food products) , and japan doesnt have much anymore because of the war , tsunamis, earthquakes, etc. And japan has lots of mechanical parts to make electronics , and canada doesnt so its an equal trade to both countries.
Canada and the US trade many things such as; wood products, uranium, car parts, fruits and vegetables, wood pulp, maple syrup, lumber, and much more.
The answer Is true
No. Canada stopped using silver in their 5 cent piece after 1921, and that coin was much smaller than the nickel.