| Weegee said: Western voice acting works aren't on par quality-wise to the ones found in Japan Provide some source or proof and maybe you will sound more credible
The younger generations , those born in the late 70s, the 80s and later, have a much better understanding than the rest
Effet de l’assimilation au Québec, 1991
Sources : Statistique Canada 1993 et 1994 The english language is more strong than ever in quebec, If you would so much as try to research your shit before posting your ignorant garbage you would know this as an established fact. :)
Québec people are much more whiny/complaining and self-righteous. This word is more apropriate for patriotic country like usa , russia or japan and everyone in the world whine and always complain |
Yes, and according to the same Statistic Canada data that you're referring to, the percentage of bilingualism for native French speaking people has stayed roughly the same since 1991. With 36.6% of them speaking both languages as of 2001 compared to 31.3% in 1991. One third of the population doesn't represent the norm, no matter how you want to stretch it.
Here, you want sources: http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census01/products/analytic/companion/lang/tables/language.cfm
The english being stronger than ever in Québec does not make it the norm, if you would so much as try to comprehend what people write before posting your shit, maybe you wouldn't put yourself in that kind of stupid situation. ;)
In fact, your stats are perfectly in accordance with what I said. Again, they're still not illustrating the norm, nor refuting any of my claims. ^_-
Indeed, the surveys that were conducted to get to those results were asking people if they were bilingual or not. Proofs were not required to be submitted.
Also of note is the fact that the increase in native English population in the Province of Québec (mostly in Montreal) makes it seem like the native French citizens are more bilingual then they were, when the increase in ratio is mostly due to the portion of English citizens learning French and becoming bilingual in turn. Not the other way around. The point being that, as stated before, the majority of the Province of Québec is French, and the ratio of reported bilingualism is roughly a third of that demographic, which again doesn't represent the norm or a majority.
@ I_Hate_Itagaki: That was such a cute tantrum. But sadly, it was compltely empty of any significant substance. ^_-







