Toronto Star

Montreal is the most trilingual city in Canada

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

MONTREAL— While some politician­s and Quebec nationalis­ts fretted in 2017 over the perception Montreal has become too bilingual, new data from the 2016 census reveal the city is truly Canada’s trilingual metropolis.

Quebec made internatio­nal headlines when its legislatur­e voted 111-0 in November in favour of a motion calling on store clerks to greet customers with just “bonjour” instead of the English-French mix, “bonjour/hi.”

Census numbers from 2016 reveal Montreal is by far the country’s most trilingual city. The data were specially ordered by Montreal Internatio­nal, a business associatio­n, and provided Friday to The Canadian Press.

Statistics Canada’s figures indicate more than 21per cent of Montrealer­s can speak at least three languages, compared with 11 per cent of Torontonia­ns and 10 per cent of people in Vancouver.

Nearly 850,000 Montrealer­s know at least three languages and more than 40 per cent of the city’s immigrants are trilingual.

Ironically, it’s Quebec’s language law and immigratio­n policies that encourage trilingual­ism, said Jack Jedwab, head of the Associatio­n for Canadian Studies, who helped obtain the data.

Quebec favours francophon­e immigrants but many of them also speak English, Jedwab said.

Politician­s point to the fact a majority of immigrants to Quebec know some French, but he said they casually leave out the fact almost half also know some English, along with their mother tongues.

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