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・ Franco-Austrian Alliance
・ Franco-Austrian War (disambiguation)
・ Franco-Belge de Fabrication du Combustible
・ Franco-Belgian Accord of 1920
・ Franco-Belgian comics
・ Franco-Belgian comics magazines
・ Franco-Belgian comics publishing houses
・ Franco-British Aviation
・ Franco-British Exhibition (1908)
・ Franco-British Nuclear Forum
・ Franco-British plans for intervention in the Winter War
・ Franco-British Student Alliance
・ Franco-British Union
・ Franco-Cantabrian region
・ Franco-Celtic
Franco-Columbian
・ Franco-country
・ Franco-Crosti boiler
・ Franco-Dahomean Wars
・ Franco-Dutch treaty on Saint Martin border controls
・ Franco-Dutch War
・ Franco-Flemish School
・ Franco-Flemish War
・ Franco-German border
・ Franco-German Brigade
・ Franco-German Institute
・ Franco-German Ministerial Council
・ Franco-Giacomo Carbone
・ Franco-Guinean Union
・ Franco-Hova Wars


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Franco-Columbian : ウィキペディア英語版
Franco-Columbian

Franco-Columbians or ''Franco-Colombiens'' are French Canadians or French-speaking Canadians (Francophones) living in the Canadian province of British Columbia.
British Columbia is, geographically, the farthest-removed province from Canada's historic francophone population, thus it is not surprising to find that francophone British Columbians are few in number. The 2001 census placed the number of British Columbians with French as a mother tongue at 57,280, 1.3% of BC's population, ranking seventh after English (3,062,430), 'other Chinese' (357,865), Cantonese (133,245), Punjabi (94,055), German (73,625), and Tagalog (66,120). A good number of these listed francophones would be European and African immigrants or migrants from eastern Canada making the Franco-Columbian community a diverse one encompassing many places of origin and differing roots in the province. The popularity of French immersion education programmes have also meant that the population of second-language French speakers outnumbers the francophone population.
==Maillardville==
(詳細はHudson's Bay and North West companies, who were mostly Metis, and during the gold rushes of the 1860s, many from France and Belgium became notable in business and society, organized migration from Quebec did not happen until the early 20th Century, when the owners of Fraser Mills imported mill workers from that province, forming the community of Maillardville, a neighbourhood of Coquitlam in suburban Vancouver. In 1909 mill workers were brought from Quebec to Maillardville〔(Societe francophone de Maillardville - À propos de nous / About us )〕 and their descendants constitute a small and proud community.〔(Historical Photographs )〕 Today Maillardville describes itself as "a community with a francophone heart" and is home to a number of francophone community organizations,〔(Societe francophone de Maillardville - Bienvenue/Welcome )〕 schools, churches,〔(Notre Dame de Fatima - Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church )〕〔(Our Lady of Lourdes Notre Dame de Lourdes )〕 a retirement home,〔(Foyer Maillard Welcomes You! )〕 the annual ''Festival du Bois'',〔(Festival du Bois - Société francophone de Maillardville )〕 and an organization of francophone scouts and guides.〔http://www.scoutsfranco.com/#/historiquepage2/4521359167〕 Community organizations place the francophone population of the Coquitlam area at 13,000.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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