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This article presents the current language demographics of Quebec, a province of Canada.

Overview

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The population census of 2006 counted 7,435,905 residing in Quebec. The table below gives an overview of the language profile of this population.

Language Speakers according to mother tongue[1] Speakers according to language most often spoken at home[2] Persons considering themselves able to conduct a conversation in the language[3] Persons considering themselves able to conduct a conversation only in the language[4]
French 5,877,660 (.%) 6,027,735 (.%) 7,028,740 (94.5%) 4,010,880 (.%)
English 575,555 (.%) 744,430 (.%) 3,017,860 (40.58%) 336,785 (.%)
Others 939,350 (.%) 518,320 (.%) (unavailable) (unavailable)

Mother tongue

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Language Quebec Montréal CMA Canada
French only 5,877,660 (%) 2,328,400 (%) 6,817,650 (%)
English only 575,555 (%) 425,635 (%) 17,882,780 (%)
French and English 43,335 (%) 26,855 (%) 98,630 (%)
Others 939,350 (%) 807,630 (%) 6,441,975 (%)
Total 7,435,905 (%) 3,588,520 (%) 31,241,030 (%)

Knowledge of languages

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Language Quebec Montréal CMA Canada
French 7,028,740 (94.5%) 3,266,845 (91.04%) 9,590,700 (30.70%)
English 3,354,645 (45.1%) 2,124,740 (59.21%) 26,578,795 (85.08%)
French and English 3,017,860 (40.58%) 1,861,930 (51.89%) 5,448,850 (17.44%)
French only 4,010,880 (53.94%) 1,404,915 (39.15%) 4,141,850 (13.26%)
English only 336,785 (4.53%) 262,810 (7.32%) 21,129,945 (67.64%)
Neither French nor English 70,375 (0.95%) 58,870 (1.64%) 520,385 (1.67%)
Total 7,435,905 (%) 3,588,520 (%) 31,241,030 (%)

Use of languages at home

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Language Quebec Montréal CMA Canada
French 6,027,735 (.%) 2,435,650 (.%) 6,608,120 (.%)
English 744,430 (.%) 592,130 (.%) 20,584,775 (.%)
Other 518,320 (.%) 442,080 (.%) 3,472,130 (.%)
French and English 52,325 (.%) 35,200 (.%) 94,060 (.%)
French and other 54,490 (.%) 47,340 (.%) 58,885 (.%)
English and other 26,560 (.%) 25,000 (.%) 406,455 (.%)
French, English and other 12,035 (.%) 11,110 (.%) 16,600 (.%)
Total 7,435,905 (%) 3,588,520 (%) 31,241,030 (%)

Use of languages at work

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Language Quebec Montréal CMA Canada
French 3,498,285 (.%) 1,499,240 (.%) 3,724,975 (.%)
English 531,935 (.%) 406,935 (.%) 14,064,105 (.%)
Other 32,725 (.%) 19,460 (.%) 273,830 (.%)
French and English 185,660 (.%) 138,805 (.%) 252,295 (.%)
French and other 4,555 (.%) 3,440 (.%) 5,055 (.%)
English and other 4,935 (.%) 4,085 (.%) 86,820 (.%)
French, English and other 8,860 (.%) 8,040 (.%) 11,025 (.%)
Total 4,266,965 (%) 2,080,005 (%) 18,418,100 (%)

Language shifts

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The contact of language groups in Quebec produces, as elsewhere, the phenomenon of language shifts. The table below groups the primary data on this matter in light of the census of 2006:

Language Speakers according to mother tongue[5] Speakers according to language most often spoken at home[6] Linguistic persistence and attraction[7] Linguistic vitality indicator[8]
French 5,877,660 6,027,735 150,075 1,02
English 575,555 744,430 168,875 1,29
Other 939,350 518,320 -421,030 0,55

While the census data allows to calculate language shifts by comparing the mother tongue figures with those for languages most often spoken at home, it is not directly possible to know where nor when the shifts occurred. Language shifts being numerous among the immigrant population, the question of knowing if they occurred before or after immersion within the host society, and if after, how many years after the arrival date, becomes important to provide an accurate measure of the strength of languages within the society being observed.

At the census of 1971, the first to provide data relating to home language, there were about 2,500 speakers of non-official languages who declared speaking French most often at home and about 95,000 others who declared the same for English. In 2001, the census data showed some 110,000 native speakers of non-official languages speaking French most often at home and 150,000 who declared the same for English. There were therefore about 100,000 new shifts in favour of French and 55,000 in favour of English.

At first sight, the situation appears favourable to French and contributes to reinforce the belief that the power of attraction of the French language must have increased in Quebec between 1971 and 2001. In reality, the number of language shifts which occurred on Quebec territory and not abroad or in some other Canadian province lead to the opposite conclusion.

Of the total of some 110,000 native allophones who reported using French most often at home in Quebec, some 50,000 were caused as a result of modifications to the 2001 census questionnaire. Another 30,000 language shifts occurred among the immigrant population before their arrival in Quebec. Other factors like deaths and interprovincial migrations contribute to transform the overall picture.

After all these adjustments, the number of language shifts that occurred on Quebec soil between 1971 and 2001 are estimated to be 30,000 in favour of French and 75,000 in favour of English.[9]

Interprovincial migration

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Over the period of the past five Canadian censuses (1976-2001), Quebec, Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick, Manitoba, Saskatchewan have had a negative migration rate[10][11], that is there were more people migrating out of these provinces to another location in Canada than there were people migrating from the rest of Canada to these same provinces.

The migration to and out of Quebec affect language groups in a different manner.

International migrations

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Language groups

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Francophones

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Indicator Quebec Montreal CMA Canada
French mother tongue
French most often spoken at home
French most often used at work
Ability to conduct a conversion in English

Anglophones

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Allophones

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Aboriginals

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Regions

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Montreal

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There are today three distinct territories in the Greater Montreal Area: the metropolitan region itself, Montreal Island, and Montreal City. (The island and the city were coterminous for a time between the municipal merger of 2002 and the "demerger" which occurred in January 2006.)

Quebec allophones account for 9% of the population of Quebec, however 88% of this population reside in the Greater Montreal. Anglophones are also concentrated in the region of Montreal (60%).

Francophones account for 68% of the total population of Greater Montreal, anglophones 12.5% and allophones 18.5%. On the island of Montreal, the francophone majority drops to 52.8% by 2005, a net decline since the 1970s owing to francophone outmigration to more affluent suburbs in Laval and the South Shore. The anglophones account for 21% of the population and the allophones 36%.

Outaouais

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Estrie

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Quebec without Montreal

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Evolution

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Historical

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Mother Tongue[12] 1951 1961 1971 1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001 2006
French 3 347 030 (82.5%) 4 269 689 (81.2%) 4 732 510 (80.7%) no data 5 250 009 (82.4%) 5 341 218 (82.9%) 5 577 720 (82.1%) 5 731 242 (80.9%) 5 787 012 (81.2%) (.%)
English (13.8%) (13.3%) 768 035 (13.1%) no data 690 604 (11.0%) 663 773 (10.3%) 618 338 (09.6%) 614 372 (08.3%) 582 564 (08.0%) (.%)
Other (03.7%) (05.6%) 350 830 (06.2%) no data 400 142 (06.6%) 426 403 (06.8%) 546 958 (08.3%) 628 402 (10.7%) 681 224 (10.0%) (.%)
Total (%) (%) 5 851 375 (%) 6 340 765 (%) 6 431 390 (%) 6 743 010 (%) 6 974 025 (%) 7 050 805 (%) (.%)

Prospective

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Legislation

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Main articles: Language policy of Quebec and Language policy of Canada

There are two sets of language laws in Quebec, which overlap and in various areas conflict or compete with each other: the laws passed by the Parliament of Canada and the laws passed by the Parliament of Quebec.

The federal language law and regulations seek to make it possible for all Canadian anglophone and francophone citizens to obtain services in the language of their choice from the federal government. Ottawa promotes the adoption of bilingualism by the population and especially among the employees in the public service.

In contrast, the Quebec language law and regulations try to promote French as the common public language of all Quebecers, while respecting the constitutional rights of its anglophone "minority" and the Amerindian and Inuit nations. The Quebec legislation promotes the adoption and the use of French to counteract the trend towards the anglicization of the non-anglophone population of Quebec.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ -
  2. ^ -
  3. ^ -
  4. ^ -
  5. ^ -
  6. ^ -
  7. ^ -
  8. ^ -
  9. ^ http://english.republiquelibre.org/The_real_force_of_French_in_Quebec
  10. ^ [1]
  11. ^ [2]
  12. ^ Multiple responses distributed evenly between languages

References

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Primary sources

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In English

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General Studies

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  • Louise Marmen et Jean-Pierre Corbeil (2004). Languages in Canada. 2001 Census, "New Canadian Perspectives", Canadian Heritage ISBN 0-662-68526-1
  • Louise Marmen et Jean-Pierre Corbeil (1999). Languages in Canada. 1996 Census, "New Canadian Perspectives", Canadian Heritage ISBN 0-662-64105-1

Language at work

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Language of instruction

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Language shifts

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Aboriginal languages

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Demolinguistic prospects

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In French

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(voir article français pour l'instant)

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Category:Demographics of Canada Category:Quebec