Check out our article on the Private Schools of Westmount for more details. As you get further outside of the Montreal city centre, you might find English to be more prevalent. This is definitely the case on the far west end of the island, beyond Montreal West and the airport.
Residential neighbourhoods like Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue , Kirkland and Pointe-Claire all have a clear anglophone majority. In the other direction, Brossard , on the east side of the Saint Lawrence River, has nearly four times as many native English speakers as native French speakers. Keep in mind however, that almost half of the residents have a mother tongue other than French or English.
But there are a handful of neighbourhoods that are even more French than others. Located in a flat area north of downtown, this borough has just over , residents, making it the most densely populated neighbourhood in all of Canada.
It is something of an upper-middle-class neighbourhood. This large borough on the east end of the island has a very urban character, featuring a strong industrial presence along with plenty of residential zones. Some still refer to H ochelaga-Maisonneuve as the French ghetto. Outside of Montreal, you can find some very strong francophone suburbs as well. At a boulangerie in Montreal, even if you switch from French to English halfway through a sentence, or sprinkle Anglicisms into your French, no one will bat an eye, but will instead continue in whatever language you opened with until they are asked to switch.
Taking a deep dive in a new language is important, but if you need some training wheels first, maybe save the trip to Europe for after your six-week intensive French course and instead head to the Great White North.
Remember Me. Vous n'avez pas encore de compte? A daily email to learn French Advertise We are hiring! French settlements and private companies were established in areas around present-day Eastern Canada in the early 17th century. Acadia and Quebec City were founded by Samuel de Chaplain in and respectively.
By , two hundred settlers who were mainly fur traders occupied Quebec. A secondary school was founded in Quebec in by Jesuit to offer education to the Children in the city. French became the language of the non-native people in Quebec by However, the Treaty of Utrecht in led to the British dominating much of the Eastern Canada relegating French to second on trade and communication. The alternation of languages practiced by the inhabitants of bilingual Montreal also has a lot to do with cordiality, as far as I could see.
But I do remember that, a few meters outside the cafe, I found a handmade poster for a missing cat. The poster was written — like almost everything you see around Montreal — in French and in English.
Nothing new there. The most curious thing, however, was to find out that the cat in question could obey commands in both languages. Now all we have to find out is if he prefers to show affection to his owner with a meow!
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