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  1. Feb 7, 2006 · Last Edited December 14, 2015. French is one of Canada’s two official languages. Although every province in Canada has people whose mother tongue is French, Québec is the only province where speakers of French are in the majority. In 2011, 7,054,975 people in Canada (21 per cent of the country’s population) had French as their mother tongue.

  2. French is the native language of over 500,000 persons in Ontario, representing 4.7 percent of the province's population. They are concentrated primarily in the Eastern Ontario and Northeastern Ontario regions, near the border with Quebec, although they are also present in smaller numbers throughout the province.

  3. Further information: Canadian French and French language in Canada. In 2011, just over 7.1 million Canadians spoke French most often at home, this was a rise of 4.2%, although the proportion of people in Canada who spoke French "most often" at home fell slightly from 21.7% to 21.5% .

  4. Until the early 18th century, there were no French women, families, or settlements in the Upper Country—just missionaries, fur traders, and militiamen, who spread the French language among the natives. It was mainly the missionaries who tried to get the natives to speak French by converting them to Christianity, spreading disease in the process.

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  6. May 30, 2019 · Several languages are used in Canada. However, English and French are the official languages accounting for 57% and 22% of Canadians respectively according to the 2011 census. Over 80% and 30.1% of the country’s population have a working knowledge of English and French respectively. A further 14.2% of the population speaks a language other ...

    • John Misachi
  7. Jun 3, 2021 · Québécois, the variant of Canadian French spoken in Québec, has its own unique characteristics and fascinating history far removed from its European roots. Here’s a portrait of the language and its evolution. In Québec, French is the mother tongue of around 7.3 million people. This means that almost 80 percent of the population are ...

  8. Jan 1, 2013 · The rationale is that English is the language that most Canadians speak. (According to the 2011 census , 85.6 per cent of Canadians could speak English. In the 2016 census, it was 86.2 per cent). Finally, the third position is derived from a multicultural conception of Canadian identity that is also multinational.

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