French Canadians
Canadien français, Canadienne française|
5,077,215 in Canada (self-identified by ancestry, 2011 Census)[1] c. 10,000,000 (French-speaking Canadians) c. 2,100,842 in United States |
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Canada, especially Quebec, New Brunswick, and Northern or Eastern Ontario, significant minority found in the United States (French Canadian Americans), mostly found in Louisiana, New England, New York and Michigan |
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French, English |
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Predominantly Roman Catholic, minority Protestant |
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French, Bretons, Acadians, Cajuns, Métis, French Americans, French Canadian Americans, French Haitians, Brayons |
French Canadian (Canadien or Canadien français in French) refers to a nation or ethnic group that comes from Canada in the period of French colonization in the 1600s. They are the main French-speaking population of Canada. It may also refer to people of French descent living in Canada, or native speakers of French in Canada.
References
Other websites
Media related to French Canadians at Wikimedia Commons
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Migration of minorities in France (i.e. Basques) can be considered as separate (ethnically) or French migration (by nationality). |