samedi, mars 15, 2008

Perception du Québec à l'international

Canada’s most contentious provincial issue, Quebec separation, appears to be on hold. Last fall, Pauline Marois said her separatist Parti Québécois had temporarily set aside its promotion of a referendum on Quebec’s separation to focus on other issues. In recent years, however, Quebec governments, separate or otherwise, have assumed many symbols of sovereign state. Somewhat confusingly, most of Quebec’s provincial institutions, for example, now have the word “national” in their names.
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/canada/index.html



A province of Canada (which is not part of USA, you dumb fuck heads) in which French is the number one language. Inhabitants (Québécois) love hockey just like other canadians. Their ancestors were French from France, but they we're conquered in 1759 by England because France army sucked ass. People from Quebec are kinda patriotic and that's why they want to show who they are to the rest of Canada.


A PROVINCE of Canada, which it's population is (sadly) generalized as patriotic.
The Québécois (population) are not all against learning english, and do not all want Quebec to become a country.

Quebec is a beautiful province with great nature and great cities such as Montreal.

Quebecois are party and family people, kinda like italians.
Though replace the spaghetti with Poutine, and the wine with beer.

http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=quebec

Greater Québecois Reich or Québec, pronounced Kay-Beck or Fren-Chi, is the only nation-inside-a-nation together with Catalonia, Brittany and Coruscant. It's contained within the borders of Canada, the world's largest country. The population consists primarily of bluenecks (rednecks of the north).

Living mainly in the newly created French-speaking city-state of Nunavut, Canada, the Québécois like their poutine and pretending they have a culture of their own.

The nation-inside-a-nation's primary language, Joual, is a curious mix of French and gibberish known to many as «franglais». The origin of the word Joual is the French word for horse, which is cheval. Franglais is to European French as the Irish accent is to English. Basically, Quebeckers found a way to move their mouth less while producing approximately the same sounds, leaving more energy to add more syllables, which they typically invest in cursing.

http://uncyclopedia.org/wiki/Quebec