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Origin, birthplace, nationality and language of the Canadian people

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fullscreen: Origin, birthplace, nationality and language of the Canadian people

Monograph

Identifikator:
1794974814
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-182133
Document type:
Monograph
Title:
Origin, birthplace, nationality and language of the Canadian people
Place of publication:
Ottawa
Publisher:
Acland
Year of publication:
1929
Scope:
224 S.
Diagramme
Digitisation:
2022
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
Chapter VIII. Origin and language - use of english and french by immigrant peoples
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Origin, birthplace, nationality and language of the Canadian people
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Introduction
  • Summary
  • Chapter I. Origins of the population of Canada
  • Chapter II. Distribution of various stocks and of foreign born according to length of residence
  • Chapter III. Composition of the population of various stocks in respect of sex, conjugal conditions and age
  • Chapter IV. Distribution of population stocks and nativity groups by provinces
  • Chapter V. The urban and rural distribution of the population of various stocks in Cananda
  • Chapter VI. Origins and intermarriage in the registration area in Canada
  • Chapter VII. The naturalization of immigrant peoples
  • Chapter VIII. Origin and language - use of english and french by immigrant peoples
  • Chapter IX. Illiteracy and school attendance as affected by the origins of the population
  • Chapter X. The relation of origins and nativity to crime
  • Chapter XI. Occupational distribution of the population
  • Chapter XII. Relation of origins to fertility, infant mortality, blindness and deaf mutism
  • Index

Full text

PROPORTIONS SPEAKING ENGLISH OR FRENCH AS MOTHER TONGUE 1865 
appear between the individual peoples in the matter of learning the languages of Canada, 
but those from the North Western part of Europe, as a group, show proportions much 
larger than do those of South, Eastern and Central European origins. 
That the Dutch, a northern people, should be so exceptional as to appear at the bottom 
of the list in Table 100, can only be explained by the practice among the Mennonites in 
the West of reporting themselves as of Dutch origin. This was very common, especially in 
the 1921 Census. The attitude of that people toward Canadian schools and other Canadian 
institutions is well known. : 
How far these differences are due to distinctively “origin” causes and how far they are 
due to length of residence in- the country, etc., is discussed in detail later in this section. 
English and French as Mother Tongue—~—An additional aspect of the relation between 
origin and language in Canada, is the extent to which the non-British and non-French 
stocks speak English and French as the Mother Tongue, to which a passing reference has 
already been made. One would expect ihe data on this point to show a somewhat marked 
relation to the figures for intermarriage with the two Canadian basic stocks. Where English 
or French is spoken in the home as the mother tongue, the inference is that intermarriage has 
taken place and also that a larger percentage of the stock has lived for a considerable time 
in Canada. While the relation between length of residence and amount of intermarriage 
will not be examined at this point, the data in respect to the numbers of the non-British 
and non-French origins who speak English or French as the mother tongue, are presented in 
Tables 101, 102 and 103: below. 
Had the Japanese, Chinese and Indians been shown in the above table the percentages 
for those origins would have appeared as very small, Only 3-0 pe. of the Finns and 3-5 p.c. 
of the Hebrew or Jewish origin spoke English or French as the mother tongue. The Syrians 
showed a somewhat higher proportion, and it is noted that a number of them spoke French 
as mother tongue, which is in accordance with the fact mentioned above, that quite a pro- 
portion spoke French rather than English. 
The difference between the peoples of North Western Europe and those of the South, 
East and Centre, is more marked here than in any table presented heretofore. The Icelanders 
are the outstanding exception in the North. Their proportion of 6-1 p.c. speaking English or 
French as the mother tongue, is below that of either the Czechs (10.5 p.c.) or Greeks 
(8-8 p.c.). With those exceptions, however, there is no overlapping of the groups. The 
balance of the northern stocks showed proportions several times as great as the Icelandic, 
and the percentages for the other South, Eastern and Central European peoples were all 
below those of the Czechs and Greeks The percentages for the North Western Europeans 
as a group were more than ten times greater than for the South, Eastern and Central 
Europeans. 
The Swiss, with a percentage of 60-5 speaking English as mother tongue (and of 61-8 
speaking either English or French as mother tongue), came second only to the Dutch for 
the whole group of immigrant stocks. It is significant in this connection that Table 73 in 
Chapter VI places the Swiss women at the top of the list in respect to marrying outside 
their “ origin ” group and the men of that origin just below the Danes who top the list for 
the men. 
Table 103 below, classifies the principal European stocks by linguistic groups. In this 
table the Belgians are shown as Flemish and, as is to be expected, they reduce the average 
for the Germanic group. } 
A marked disparity is indicated between those of Scandinavian and Germanic origin in 
respect to speaking English or French as their mother tongue. The percentages for those 
of Dutch and German origin are considerably higher than are those for the Scandinavians. 
Yet the strange point is that, with the exception of the Icelanders, the Scandinavian peoples 
on the average show a percentage unable to speak either French or English, about as low as 
the Germans and lower than the Dutch. (See Table 98.) The explanation is found in the 
fact that somewhat larger proportions of the Norwegians, Swedes and Danes had learned 
English outside the home, than was found in the case of the Germans, and far larger pro- 
nortions than in the case of the Dutch.
	        

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Origin, Birthplace, Nationality and Language of the Canadian People. Acland, 1929.
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