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2011 Census of Canada: Topic-based tabulations
Topic-based tabulation: Selected Demographic and Language Characteristics (375), First Official Language Spoken (4A), Age Groups (8B) and Sex (3) for the population excluding institutional residents of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Divisions and Census Subdivisions, 2011 Census
About this variable: Selected Demographic and Language Characteristics (375)
Definition
No definition is available for this variable.
Values
- Age groups - Total population excluding institutional residents
- 0 to 4 years
- 5 to 9 years
- 10 to 14 years
- 15 to 19 years
- 20 to 24 years
- 25 to 29 years
- 30 to 34 years
- 35 to 39 years
- 40 to 44 years
- 45 to 49 years
- 50 to 54 years
- 55 to 59 years
- 60 to 64 years
- 65 to 69 years
- 70 to 74 years
- 75 to 79 years
- 80 to 84 years
- 85 years and over
- Median age Footnote 20
- Total population 15 years and over by marital status Footnote 21
- Married or living with a common-law partner
- Married (and not separated)
- Living common law
- Not married and not living with a common-law partner
- Single (never legally married)
- Separated
- Divorced
- Widowed
- Knowledge of official languages - Total population excluding institutional residents Footnote 30
- English only
- French only
- English and French
- Neither English nor French
- Mother Tongue - Total population excluding institutional residents
- Single responses
- English
- French
- Non-official languages
- Selected Aboriginal languages Footnote 40
- Atikamekw
- Cree, n.o.s.
- Dene
- Innu/Montagnais
- Inuktitut
- Mi'kmaq
- Ojibway
- Oji-Cree
- Stoney
- Selected non-Aboriginal languages Footnote 50
- African languages, n.i.e.
- Afrikaans
- Akan (Twi)
- Albanian
- Amharic
- Arabic
- Armenian
- Bantu languages, n.i.e.
- Bengali
- Berber languages (Kabyle)
- Bisayan languages
- Bosnian
- Bulgarian
- Burmese
- Cantonese
- Chinese, n.o.s.
- Creoles
- Croatian
- Czech
- Danish
- Dutch
- Estonian
- Finnish
- Flemish
- Fukien
- German
- Greek
- Gujarati
- Hakka
- Hebrew
- Hindi
- Hungarian
- Ilocano
- Indo-Iranian languages, n.i.e.
- Italian
- Japanese
- Khmer (Cambodian)
- Korean
- Kurdish
- Lao
- Latvian
- Lingala
- Lithuanian
- Macedonian
- Malay
- Malayalam
- Maltese
- Mandarin
- Marathi
- Nepali
- Niger-Congo languages, n.i.e.
- Norwegian
- Oromo
- Panjabi (Punjabi)
- Pashto
- Persian (Farsi)
- Polish
- Portuguese
- Romanian
- Rundi (Kirundi)
- Russian
- Rwanda (Kinyarwanda)
- Semitic languages, n.i.e.
- Serbian
- Serbo-Croatian
- Shanghainese
- Sign languages, n.i.e.
- Sindhi
- Sinhala (Sinhalese)
- Sino-Tibetan languages, n.i.e.
- Slavic languages, n.i.e.
- Slovak
- Slovenian
- Somali
- Spanish
- Swahili
- Swedish
- Tagalog (Pilipino,Filipino)
- Taiwanese
- Tamil
- Telugu
- Thai
- Tibetan languages
- Tigrigna
- Turkish
- Ukrainian
- Urdu
- Vietnamese
- Yiddish
- Other languages Footnote 140
- Multiple responses
- English and French
- English and non-official language
- French and non-official language
- English, French and non-official language
- Detailed language spoken most often at home - Total population excluding institutional residents Footnote 146
- Single responses
- English
- French
- Non-official languages
- Selected Aboriginal languages Footnote 151
- Atikamekw
- Cree, n.o.s.
- Dene
- Innu/Montagnais
- Inuktitut
- Mi'kmaq
- Ojibway
- Oji-Cree
- Stoney
- Selected non-Aboriginal languages Footnote 161
- African languages, n.i.e.
- Afrikaans
- Akan (Twi)
- Albanian
- Amharic
- Arabic
- Armenian
- Bantu languages, n.i.e.
- Bengali
- Berber languages (Kabyle)
- Bisayan languages
- Bosnian
- Bulgarian
- Burmese
- Cantonese
- Chinese, n.o.s.
- Creoles
- Croatian
- Czech
- Danish
- Dutch
- Estonian
- Finnish
- Flemish
- Fukien
- German
- Greek
- Gujarati
- Hakka
- Hebrew
- Hindi
- Hungarian
- Ilocano
- Indo-Iranian languages, n.i.e.
- Italian
- Japanese
- Khmer (Cambodian)
- Korean
- Kurdish
- Lao
- Latvian
- Lingala
- Lithuanian
- Macedonian
- Malay
- Malayalam
- Maltese
- Mandarin
- Marathi
- Nepali
- Niger-Congo languages, n.i.e.
- Norwegian
- Oromo
- Panjabi (Punjabi)
- Pashto
- Persian (Farsi)
- Polish
- Portuguese
- Romanian
- Rundi (Kirundi)
- Russian
- Rwanda (Kinyarwanda)
- Semitic languages, n.i.e.
- Serbian
- Serbo-Croatian
- Shanghainese
- Sign languages, n.i.e.
- Sindhi
- Sinhala (Sinhalese)
- Sino-Tibetan languages, n.i.e.
- Slavic languages, n.i.e.
- Slovak
- Slovenian
- Somali
- Spanish
- Swahili
- Swedish
- Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino)
- Taiwanese
- Tamil
- Telugu
- Thai
- Tibetan languages
- Tigrigna
- Turkish
- Ukrainian
- Urdu
- Vietnamese
- Yiddish
- Other languages Footnote 251
- Multiple responses
- English and French
- English and non-official language
- French and non-official language
- English, French and non-official language
- Detailed other language spoken regularly at home - Total population excluding institutional residents Footnote 257
- None
- Single responses
- English
- French
- Non-official languages
- Selected Aboriginal languages Footnote 263
- Atikamekw
- Cree, n.o.s.
- Dene
- Innu/Montagnais
- Inuktitut
- Mi'kmaq
- Ojibway
- Oji-Cree
- Stoney
- Selected non-Aboriginal languages Footnote 273
- African languages, n.i.e.
- Afrikaans
- Akan (Twi)
- Albanian
- Amharic
- Arabic
- Armenian
- Bantu languages, n.i.e.
- Bengali
- Berber languages (Kabyle)
- Bisayan languages
- Bosnian
- Bulgarian
- Burmese
- Cantonese
- Chinese, n.o.s.
- Creoles
- Croatian
- Czech
- Danish
- Dutch
- Estonian
- Finnish
- Flemish
- Fukien
- German
- Greek
- Gujarati
- Hakka
- Hebrew
- Hindi
- Hungarian
- Ilocano
- Indo-Iranian languages, n.i.e.
- Italian
- Japanese
- Khmer (Cambodian)
- Korean
- Kurdish
- Lao
- Latvian
- Lingala
- Lithuanian
- Macedonian
- Malay
- Malayalam
- Maltese
- Mandarin
- Marathi
- Nepali
- Niger-Congo languages, n.i.e.
- Norwegian
- Oromo
- Panjabi (Punjabi)
- Pashto
- Persian (Farsi)
- Polish
- Portuguese
- Romanian
- Rundi (Kirundi)
- Russian
- Rwanda (Kinyarwanda)
- Semitic languages, n.i.e.
- Serbian
- Serbo-Croatian
- Shanghainese
- Sign languages, n.i.e.
- Sindhi
- Sinhala (Sinhalese)
- Sino-Tibetan languages, n.i.e.
- Slavic languages, n.i.e.
- Slovak
- Slovenian
- Somali
- Spanish
- Swahili
- Swedish
- Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino)
- Taiwanese
- Tamil
- Telugu
- Thai
- Tibetan languages
- Tigrigna
- Turkish
- Ukrainian
- Urdu
- Vietnamese
- Yiddish
- Other languages Footnote 363
- Multiple responses
- English and French
- English and non-official language
- French and non-official language
- English, French and non-official language
- First official language spoken - Total population excluding institutional residents Footnote 369
- English
- French
- English and French
- Neither English nor French
- Official language minority (number) Footnote 374
- Official language minority (percentage) Footnote 375
Footnotes
- Footnote 20
-
The median age is an age 'x', such that exactly one half of the population is older than 'x' and the other half is younger than 'x'.
- Footnote 21
-
Marital status
Part A - Short definition
Refers to the marital status of the person, taking into account his/her common-law status.
Part B - Detailed definition
Refers to the marital status of the person, taking into account his/her common-law status. Persons who are married or living common law may be of opposite sex or of the same sex. The classification is as follows:
Married (and not separated): A person who is married and has not separated or obtained a divorce, and whose spouse is living.
Common-law: A person who is living with another person as a couple but who is not legally married to that person.
Separated: A person who is married but who no longer lives with his/her spouse (for any reason other than illness, work or school) and who has not obtained a divorce. Persons living common law are not included in this category.
Divorced: A person who has obtained a legal divorce and who has not remarried. Persons living common law are not included in this category.
Widowed: A person who has lost his/her spouse through death and who has not remarried. Persons living common law are not included in this category.
Single (never legally married): A person who has never married or a person whose marriage has been annulled and who has not remarried. Persons living common law are not included in this category. - Footnote 30
-
Total population excluding institutional residents. The population excluding institutional residents includes Canadian citizens (by birth or by naturalization) and landed immigrants (permanent residents) excluding those who live in institutions (institutional collective dwellings). Canadian citizens and landed immigrants either: (1) have a usual place of residence in Canada; (2) are abroad either on a military base or attached to a diplomatic mission; or (3) are at sea or in port aboard merchant vessels under Canadian registry or Canadian government vessels. Since 1991, the target population also includes persons with a usual place of residence in Canada who are claiming refugee status, who hold study permits, or who hold work permits, as well as family members living with them; for census purposes, this group is referred to as non-permanent residents. The population universe does not include foreign residents.
- Footnote 40
-
Selected Aboriginal languages
The languages shown were selected based on the Aboriginal mother tongues most often reported as single responses in Canada in the 2011 Census of Population. - Footnote 50
-
Selected non-Aboriginal languages
The languages shown were selected based on the non-Aboriginal mother tongues (other than English or French) most often reported as single responses in Canada in the 2011 Census of Population. - Footnote 140
-
Other languages
This is a subtotal of all languages collected by the census that are not displayed separately here. For a full list of languages collected in the census, please refer to Appendix D in the 2011 Census Dictionary. - Footnote 146
-
Total population excluding institutional residents
The population excluding institutional residents includes Canadian citizens (by birth or by naturalization) and landed immigrants (permanent residents) excluding those who live in institutions (institutional collective dwellings). Canadian citizens and landed immigrants either: (1) have a usual place of residence in Canada; (2) are abroad either on a military base or attached to a diplomatic mission; or (3) are at sea or in port aboard merchant vessels under Canadian registry or Canadian government vessels. Since 1991, the target population also includes persons with a usual place of residence in Canada who are claiming refugee status, who hold study permits, or who hold work permits, as well as family members living with them; for census purposes, this group is referred to as non-permanent residents. The population universe does not include foreign residents. - Footnote 151
-
Selected Aboriginal languages
The languages shown were selected based on the Aboriginal mother tongues most often reported as single responses in Canada in the 2011 Census of Population. - Footnote 161
-
Selected non-Aboriginal languages
The languages shown were selected based on the non-Aboriginal mother tongues (other than English or French) most often reported as single responses in Canada in the 2011 Census of Population. - Footnote 251
-
Other languages
This is a subtotal of all languages collected by the census that are not displayed separately here. For a full list of languages collected in the census, please refer to Appendix D in the 2011 Census Dictionary. - Footnote 257
-
Total population excluding institutional residents
The population excluding institutional residents includes Canadian citizens (by birth or by naturalization) and landed immigrants (permanent residents) excluding those who live in institutions (institutional collective dwellings). Canadian citizens and landed immigrants either: (1) have a usual place of residence in Canada; (2) are abroad either on a military base or attached to a diplomatic mission; or (3) are at sea or in port aboard merchant vessels under Canadian registry or Canadian government vessels. Since 1991, the target population also includes persons with a usual place of residence in Canada who are claiming refugee status, who hold study permits, or who hold work permits, as well as family members living with them; for census purposes, this group is referred to as non-permanent residents. The population universe does not include foreign residents. - Footnote 263
-
Selected Aboriginal languages
The languages shown were selected based on the Aboriginal mother tongues most often reported as single responses in Canada in the 2011 Census of Population. - Footnote 273
-
Selected non-Aboriginal languages
The languages shown were selected based on the non-Aboriginal mother tongues (other than English or French) most often reported as single responses in Canada in the 2011 Census of Population. - Footnote 363
-
Other languages
This is a subtotal of all languages collected by the census that are not displayed separately here. For a full list of languages collected in the census, please refer to Appendix D in the 2011 Census Dictionary. - Footnote 369
-
Total population excluding institutional residents
The population excluding institutional residents includes Canadian citizens (by birth or by naturalization) and landed immigrants (permanent residents) excluding those who live in institutions (institutional collective dwellings). Canadian citizens and landed immigrants either: (1) have a usual place of residence in Canada; (2) are abroad either on a military base or attached to a diplomatic mission; or (3) are at sea or in port aboard merchant vessels under Canadian registry or Canadian government vessels. Since 1991, the target population also includes persons with a usual place of residence in Canada who are claiming refugee status, who hold study permits, or who hold work permits, as well as family members living with them; for census purposes, this group is referred to as non-permanent residents. The population universe does not include foreign residents. - Footnote 374
-
English is the first official language spoken by Quebec's official language minority, which consists of all individuals with English as a first official language spoken and half of those with both English and French. French is the first official language spoken by the official language minority in the country overall and in every province and territory outside Quebec, which consists of all individuals with French as a first official language spoken and half of those with both English and French.
- Footnote 375
-
English is the first official language spoken by Quebec's official language minority, which consists of all individuals with English as a first official language spoken and half of those with both English and French. French is the first official language spoken by the official language minority in the country overall and in every province and territory outside Quebec, which consists of all individuals with French as a first official language spoken and half of those with both English and French.
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