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2011 National Household Survey: Data tables

Tabulation: Language Used Most Often at Work (8), Other Language Used Regularly at Work (9), Language Spoken Most Often at Home (8), Other Language Spoken Regularly at Home (9), Mother Tongue (8) and Immigrant Status and Period of Immigration (10) for the Population Aged 15 Years and Over Who Worked Since 2010, in Private Households of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2011 National Household Survey

Data table

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This table details language used most often at work , other language used regularly at work , language spoken most often at home , other language spoken regularly at home , mother tongue and immigrant status and period of immigration for the population aged 15 years and over who worked since 2010, in private households in Vancouver
Global non-response rate (GNR)Footnote 1 = 24.4 %
Language used most often at work (8) Other language used regularly at work (9)
Total - Other language used regularly at work None English French Non-official language English and French English and non-official language French and non-official language English, French and non-official language
Total - Language used most often at work 1,357,720 1,242,375 24,670 11,820 76,395 15 795 1,615 0
English 1,260,660 1,173,810 0 11,670 73,570 0 0 1,615 0
French 3,045 890 2,080 0 25 0 55 0 0
Non-official language 68,405 43,255 22,590 90 1,685 15 730 0 0
English and French 1,960 1,795 0 0 160 0 0 0 0
English and non-official language 23,335 22,325 0 60 945 0 0 0 0
French and non-official language 20 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
English, French and non-official language 295 285 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Symbol(s)

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not available for a specific reference period

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not applicable

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Symbol x

suppressed to meet the confidentiality requirements of the Statistics Act

x

Symbol F

too unreliable to be published

F

Footnote(s)

Footnote 1

For the 2011 National Household Survey (NHS) estimates, the global non-response rate (GNR) is used as an indicator of data quality. This indicator combines complete non-response (household) and partial non-response (question) into a single rate. The value of the GNR is presented to users. A smaller GNR indicates a lower risk of non-response bias and as a result, lower risk of inaccuracy. The threshold used for estimates' suppression is a GNR of 50% or more. For more information, please refer to the National Household Survey User Guide, 2011.

Return to footnote 1 referrer

Source: Statistics Canada, 2011 National Household Survey, Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 99-012-X2011029.

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