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・ Governor General's Award for English-language fiction
・ Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction
・ Governor General's Award for English-language poetry
・ Governor General's Award for English-language poetry or drama
・ Governor General's Award for French to English translation
・ Governor General's Award for French-language children's illustration
・ Governor General's Award for French-language children's literature
・ Governor General's Award for French-language drama
・ Governor General's Award for French-language fiction
・ Governor General's Award for French-language non-fiction
・ Governor General's Award for French-language poetry
・ Governor General's Award for French-language poetry or drama
・ Governor General's Awards
・ Governor General's Awards in Visual and Media Arts
・ Governor General's Bodyguard
Governor General's Foot Guards
・ Governor General's International Award for Canadian Studies
・ Governor General's Warrant
・ Governor Generoso, Davao Oriental
・ Governor Greene Cemetery
・ Governor Grover (sternwheeler)
・ Governor H. Rex Lee Auditorium
・ Governor Harris
・ Governor Harry W. Nice Memorial Bridge
・ Governor Henry Lippitt House
・ Governor Hodges
・ Governor Horner State Memorial
・ Governor Hotel (Portland, Oregon)
・ Governor Hughes
・ Governor Hunt


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Governor General's Foot Guards : ウィキペディア英語版
Governor General's Foot Guards

The Governor General's Foot Guards (GGFG) is one of three Royal Household regiments in the Primary Reserve of the Canadian Army (along with The Governor General's Horse Guards and the Canadian Grenadier Guards) and the most senior militia infantry regiment in Canada. ''Civitas et Princeps Cura Nostra'' ("Our Care is Queen and Country") is the regiment's motto.
The regiment has an operational role that encompasses both the territorial defence of Canada and supporting regular Canadian forces overseas. It also performs the mounting of the Ceremonial Guard on Parliament Hill and at Rideau Hall in Ottawa, a task it shares with the Canadian Grenadier Guards. This gives the regiment a role similar to that of the guards regiments of the British Army. The GGFG were formally allied with the Coldstream Guards of the United Kingdom after being informally allied with them since the formation of the regiment. The regimental dress uniform has buttons in pairs, similar to the Coldstream Guards, with a red plume (of different material and lengths, dependent on the rank of the soldier) worn on the left side of the bearskin.
The GGFG perpetuate the 2nd Canadian Battalion (Eastern Ontario Regiment), CEF, and 77th (Ottawa) Battalion, CEF.
==Lineage==

The Governor General's Foot Guards originated in Ottawa, Ontario, on 7 June 1872 as the 1st Battalion Governor General's Foot Guards. It was redesignated as the Governor General's Foot Guards on 16 September 1887; as The Governor General's Foot Guards on 1 April 1896; as the 2nd (Reserve) Battalion, The Governor General's Foot Guards on 7 November 1941; as The Governor General's Foot Guards on 31 January 1946; as The Governor General's Foot Guards (5th Battalion, The Canadian Guards) on 1 September 1954; as the Governor General's Foot Guards (5th Battalion, The Canadian Guards) on 25 April 1958; and finally returned to the name ''Governor General's Foot Guards'' on 1 September 1976.〔

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