Radical Jack and the Loan Words: A Lexicological Approach to Canadian Periodicity
Year:
1997
Author :
Volume and number:
, 12
Collection:
, 2
Journal:
, British Journal of Canadian Studies
Pages :
, 227-238
Abstract
A study of the nineteenth century use of “loan words”, non-English words, adopted by English Canadians. The author investigates 458 loan words from this period, finding that almost one-half were borrowed from the French language and many coming into Canadian English use at the beginning of the century. However, after the publication of the Durham Report (1839) by John “Radical Jack” Lambton, the Earl of Durham (1792-1840), which advocated the cultural assimilation of French Lower Canada by the English, the appropriation of French loan words by English Canadians ceases.
Theme :
Quebec Anglophones
Database: This is a bibliographic reference. Please note that the majority of references in our database do not contain full texts.
- To consult references on the health of official‑language minority communities (OLMC): click here