Archived Content

Information identified as archived is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please contact us to request a format other than those available.

NHS Profile, Bridgewater, T, Nova Scotia, 2011

NHS data

NHS data

Select a table view
NHS data, Bridgewater, T, Nova Scotia. Table summary
The table shows total, male and female data (appearing as column headers) for selected characteristics (appearing as row headers).
Characteristic Bridgewater, T
Nova Scotia
(Census subdivision)
Total Male Female
Education
Total population aged 15 years and over by highest certificate, diploma or degreeNational Household Survey data footnote 70 6,845 3,130 3,710
No certificate, diploma or degree 1,735 790 945
High school diploma or equivalentNational Household Survey data footnote 71 1,735 785 950
Postsecondary certificate, diploma or degreeNational Household Survey data footnote 72 3,370 1,560 1,820
Apprenticeship or trades certificate or diplomaNational Household Survey data footnote 73 685 380 305
College, CEGEP or other non-university certificate or diploma 1,430 615 815
University certificate or diploma below bachelor levelNational Household Survey data footnote 74 240 100 140
University certificate, diploma or degree at bachelor level or above 1,015 460 555
Bachelor's degree 705 315 395
University certificate, diploma or degree above bachelor levelNational Household Survey data footnote 75 305 150 155
Total population aged 25 to 64 years by highest certificate, diploma or degreeNational Household Survey data footnote 70 4,180 1,920 2,260
No certificate, diploma or degree 675 350 330
High school diploma or equivalentNational Household Survey data footnote 71 955 400 550
Postsecondary certificate, diploma or degreeNational Household Survey data footnote 72 2,550 1,175 1,380
Apprenticeship or trades certificate or diplomaNational Household Survey data footnote 73 470 275 190
College, CEGEP or other non-university certificate or diploma 1,040 470 570
University certificate or diploma below bachelor levelNational Household Survey data footnote 74 170 65 100
University certificate, diploma or degree at bachelor level or above 870 355 515
Bachelor's degree 620 250 365
University certificate, diploma or degree above bachelor levelNational Household Survey data footnote 75 250 105 145
Total population aged 15 years and over by major field of study - Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) 2011National Household Survey data footnote 76 6,840 3,130 3,710
No postsecondary certificate, diploma or degreeNational Household Survey data footnote 77 3,465 1,575 1,895
Education 360 100 260
Visual and performing arts, and communications technologies 65 55 0
Humanities 135 95 45
Social and behavioural sciences and law 285 110 175
Business, management and public administration 820 190 625
Physical and life sciences and technologies 60 25 35
Mathematics, computer and information sciences 95 60 35
Architecture, engineering, and related technologies 680 675 0
Agriculture, natural resources and conservation 50 50 0
Health and related fieldsNational Household Survey data footnote 78 595 80 520
Personal, protective and transportation services 230 130 100
Other fields of studyNational Household Survey data footnote 79 0 0 0
Total population aged 15 years and over by location of study compared with province or territory of residenceNational Household Survey data footnote 80 6,845 3,130 3,710
No postsecondary certificate, diploma or degree 3,470 1,575 1,895
With postsecondary certificate, diploma or degree 3,370 1,560 1,815
Location of study inside Canada 3,180 1,475 1,705
Same as province or territory of residence 2,570 1,165 1,410
Another province or territory 610 310 295
Location of study outside Canada 195 85 115

National Household Survey data: Footnotes

Footnote 70

'Highest certificate, diploma or degree' refers to the highest certificate, diploma or degree completed based on a hierarchy which is generally related to the amount of time spent 'in-class.' For postsecondary completers, a university education is considered to be a higher level of schooling than a college education, while a college education is considered to be a higher level of education than in the trades. Although some trades requirements may take as long or longer to complete than a given college or university program, the majority of time is spent in on-the-job paid training and less time is spent in the classroom. For further definitions, refer to the National Household Survey Dictionary, Catalogue no. 99-000-X. For any comments on collection, dissemination or data quality for this variable, refer to the Education Reference Guide, National Household Survey, Catalogue no. 99-012-X2011006.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 70 referrer

Footnote 71

'High school diploma or equivalent' includes persons who have graduated from a secondary school or equivalent. It excludes persons with a postsecondary certificate, diploma or degree.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 71 referrer

Footnote 72

'Postsecondary certificate, diploma or degree' includes 'apprenticeship or trades certificates or diplomas,' 'college, CEGEP or other non-university certificates or diplomas' and university certificates, diplomas and degrees.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 72 referrer

Footnote 73

'Apprenticeship or trades certificate or diploma' includes Registered Apprenticeship certificates (including Certificate of Qualification, Journeyperson's designation) and other trades certificates or diplomas such as pre-employment or vocational certificates and diplomas from brief trade programs completed at community colleges, institutes of technology, vocational centres, and similar institutions.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 73 referrer

Footnote 74

Comparisons with other data sources suggest that the category 'University certificate or diploma below the bachelor's level' was over-reported in the NHS. This category likely includes some responses that are actually college certificates or diplomas, bachelor's degrees or other types of education (e.g., university transfer programs, bachelor's programs completed in other countries, incomplete bachelor's programs, non-university professional designations). We recommend users interpret the results for the 'University certificate or diploma below the bachelor's level' category with caution.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 74 referrer

Footnote 75

'University certificate, diploma or degree above bachelor level' includes the categories 'University certificate or diploma above bachelor level,' 'Degree in medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine or optometry,' 'Master's degree' and 'Earned doctorate.'

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 75 referrer

Footnote 76

'Major field of study' is defined as the main discipline or subject of learning. It is collected for the highest certificate, diploma or degree above the high school or secondary school level and classified according to the Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) Canada 2011. This variable shows the 'primary groupings,' a CIP variant. For more information on the CIP classification, see the Classification of Instructional Programs, Canada 2011, Catalogue no. 12-590-X available from: www.statcan.gc.ca/concepts/classification-eng.htm. For any comments on collection, dissemination or data quality for this variable, refer to the Education Reference Guide, National Household Survey, Catalogue no. 99-012-X2011006.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 76 referrer

Footnote 77

'No postsecondary certificate, diploma or degree' includes persons who have not completed a registered apprenticeship certificate (including Certificate of Qualification, Journeyperson's designation) or other trades certificate or diploma, a college, CEGEP or other non-university certificate or diploma, or a university certificate, diploma or degree.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 77 referrer

Footnote 78

Called 'Health, parks, recreation and fitness' in CIP Canada 2000.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 78 referrer

Footnote 79

Includes 'Multidisciplinary/interdisciplinary studies, other.'

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 79 referrer

Footnote 80

'Location of study compared with province or territory of residence' indicates whether the 'Location of study' is the same as the province or territory of residence in 2011, a different Canadian province or territory, or outside Canada. 'Location of study' refers to the province, territory or country of the institution where the highest certificate, diploma or degree above the high school level was completed. Users should be aware that some respondents may have reported the physical location of study rather than the location of the certificate, diploma or degree-granting institution. This could affect the responses of those who obtained a certificate, diploma or degree through a joint program or by distance learning with credentials granted in another province or country. In particular, a number of persons reported a location of study for a university credential in one of the territories (Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut), even though there were no educational institutions in the territories with the authority to grant university degrees. For any other comments on collection, dissemination or data quality for this variable or 'Location of study,' refer to the Education Reference Guide, National Household Survey, Catalogue no. 99-012-X2011006.

Return to National Household Survey data footnote 80 referrer

How to cite

How to cite: Statistics Canada. 2013. Bridgewater, T, Nova Scotia (Code 1206004) (table). National Household Survey (NHS) Profile. 2011 National Household Survey. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 99-004-XWE. Ottawa. Released September 11, 2013.
http://www12.statcan.gc.ca/nhs-enm/2011/dp-pd/prof/index.cfm?Lang=E (accessed January 12, 2025).

Data source

2011 National Household Survey

NHS data quality

Bridgewater, T, Nova Scotia

Download current NHS table

  •  CSV (approx. 70 kb)
  •  TAB (approx. 70 kb)

Download NHS data for a complete geographic level

Census data

Census data

Select a table view
Census data, Bridgewater, T, Nova Scotia. Table summary
The table shows total, male and female data grouped by geography (appearing as column headers) for selected characteristics (appearing as row headers).
Characteristic Bridgewater, T
Nova Scotia
(Census subdivision)
Total Male Female
Population and dwelling counts
Population in 2011Census data footnote 1 8,241 ... ...
Population in 2006Census data footnote 1 7,944 ... ...
2006 to 2011 population change (%) 3.7 ... ...
Total private dwellingsCensus data footnote 2 3,996 ... ...
Private dwellings occupied by usual residentsCensus data footnote 3 3,795 ... ...
Population density per square kilometre 605.8 ... ...
Land area (square km) 13.60 ... ...
Age characteristics
Total population by age groupsCensus data footnote 4 8,240 3,785 4,455
0 to 4 years 375 185 195
5 to 9 years 340 190 150
10 to 14 years 395 185 210
15 to 19 years 455 235 225
15 years 75 40 30
16 years 85 40 45
17 years 90 45 45
18 years 105 55 50
19 years 100 50 50
20 to 24 years 475 255 220
25 to 29 years 475 225 250
30 to 34 years 415 190 225
35 to 39 years 445 205 245
40 to 44 years 515 240 270
45 to 49 years 600 275 320
50 to 54 years 630 305 325
55 to 59 years 600 270 325
60 to 64 years 555 260 295
65 to 69 years 490 205 285
70 to 74 years 415 195 220
75 to 79 years 395 145 255
80 to 84 years 295 105 190
85 years and over 370 115 250
Median age of the populationCensus data footnote 5 47.0 44.7 49.0
% of the population aged 15 and over 86.5 85.2 87.7
Marital status
Total population 15 years and over by marital statusCensus data footnote 6 7,130 3,230 3,900
Married or living with a common-law partner 3,915 1,955 1,965
Married (and not separated) 3,170 1,580 1,590
Living common law 750 370 375
Not married and not living with a common-law partner 3,215 1,280 1,935
Single (never legally married) 1,685 890 800
Separated 255 90 165
Divorced 545 190 360
Widowed 725 110 615
Family characteristics
Total number of census families in private householdsCensus data footnote 7 2,350 ... ...
Size of census family: 2 persons 1,445 ... ...
Size of census family: 3 persons 475 ... ...
Size of census family: 4 persons 330 ... ...
Size of census family: 5 or more persons 95 ... ...
Total number of census families in private householdsCensus data footnote 8 2,350 ... ...
Total couple families by family structure and number of children 1,910 ... ...
Married couples 1,535 ... ...
Without children at home 925 ... ...
With children at home 610 ... ...
1 child 275 ... ...
2 children 255 ... ...
3 or more children 75 ... ...
Common-law couples 375 ... ...
Without children at home 220 ... ...
With children at home 150 ... ...
1 child 90 ... ...
2 children 45 ... ...
3 or more children 20 ... ...
Total lone-parent families by sex of parent and number of children 440 ... ...
Female parent 380 ... ...
1 child 255 ... ...
2 children 100 ... ...
3 or more children 30 ... ...
Male parent 60 ... ...
1 child 45 ... ...
2 children 10 ... ...
3 or more children 0 ... ...
Total children in census families in private households 1,895 ... ...
Under six years of age 445 ... ...
6 to 14 years 660 ... ...
15 to 17 years 230 ... ...
18 to 24 years 365 ... ...
25 years and over 195 ... ...
Average number of children at home per census family 0.8 ... ...
Household and dwelling characteristics
Total number of persons in private households 7,940 3,685 4,255
Number of persons not in census families 1,790 715 1,075
Living with relativesCensus data footnote 9 105 50 65
Living with non-relatives only 380 215 165
Living alone 1,300 455 845
Number of census family persons 6,150 2,970 3,180
Average number of persons per census family 2.6 ... ...
Total number of persons aged 65 years and over in private households 1,730 700 1,030
Number of persons not in census families aged 65 years and over 670 145 525
Living with relativesCensus data footnote 9 35 10 25
Living with non-relatives only 25 10 15
Living alone 610 130 485
Number of census family persons aged 65 years and over 1,060 555 505
Total number of private households by household typeCensus data footnote 10 3,795 ... ...
Census-family households 2,320 ... ...
One-family-only householdsCensus data footnote 11 2,195 ... ...
Couple-family householdsCensus data footnote 12 1,815 ... ...
Without children 1,095 ... ...
With children 720 ... ...
Lone-parent-family households 380 ... ...
Other family householdsCensus data footnote 13 120 ... ...
One-family households with persons not in a census family 95 ... ...
Couple-family householdsCensus data footnote 14 55 ... ...
Without children 20 ... ...
With children 30 ... ...
Lone-parent-family households 40 ... ...
Two-or-more-family households 30 ... ...
Non-census-family households 1,470 ... ...
One-person households 1,300 ... ...
Two-or-more-person households 175 ... ...
Total number of occupied private dwellings by structural type of dwellingCensus data footnote 15 3,795 ... ...
Single-detached house 2,215 ... ...
Apartment, building that has five or more storeys 5 ... ...
Movable dwellingCensus data footnote 16 235 ... ...
Other dwellingCensus data footnote 17 1,345 ... ...
Semi-detached house 185 ... ...
Row house 55 ... ...
Apartment, duplex 100 ... ...
Apartment, building that has fewer than five storeys 995 ... ...
Other single-attached house 10 ... ...
Total number of private households by household sizeCensus data footnote 18 3,795 ... ...
1 person 1,295 ... ...
2 persons 1,515 ... ...
3 persons 490 ... ...
4 persons 355 ... ...
5 persons 105 ... ...
6 or more persons 35 ... ...
Number of persons in private households 7,940 ... ...
Average number of persons in private households 2.1 ... ...
Detailed mother tongue
Detailed mother tongue - Total population excluding institutional residentsCensus data footnote 19 8,085 3,740 4,350
  Single responses  8,045 3,715 4,330
    English  7,745 3,575 4,175
    French  115 55 60
    Non-official languages  180 95 95
      Selected Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 20 0 0 0
        Atikamekw    0 0 0
        Cree, n.o.s.  0 0 0
        Dene  0 0 0
        Innu/Montagnais  0 0 0
        Inuktitut  0 0 0
        Mi'kmaq  0 0 0
        Ojibway  0 0 0
        Oji-Cree  0 0 0
        Stoney  0 0 0
Selected non-Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 21 185 95 95
        African languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Afrikaans  0 0 5
        Akan (Twi)  0 0 0
        Albanian  0 0 0
        Amharic  0 0 0
        Arabic  15 10 5
        Armenian  0 0 0
        Bantu languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Bengali  5 0 0
        Berber languages (Kabyle)  0 0 0
        Bisayan languages  0 0 0
        Bosnian  0 0 0
        Bulgarian  0 0 0
        Burmese  0 0 0
        Cantonese  5 5 5
        Chinese, n.o.s.  5 0 5
        Creoles  0 0 0
        Croatian  0 5 0
        Czech  0 0 0
        Danish  0 0 0
        Dutch  5 5 5
        Estonian  0 0 0
        Finnish  0 0 5
        Flemish  0 0 0
        Fukien  0 0 0
        German  35 15 15
        Greek  0 0 0
        Gujarati  5 5 0
        Hakka  0 0 0
        Hebrew  0 0 0
        Hindi  0 0 0
        Hungarian  0 0 5
        Ilocano  0 0 0
        Indo-Iranian languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Italian  0 0 0
        Japanese  5 0 5
        Khmer (Cambodian)  0 0 0
        Korean  5 0 0
        Kurdish  0 0 0
        Lao  0 0 0
        Latvian  0 0 0
        Lingala  0 0 0
        Lithuanian  0 0 0
        Macedonian  0 0 0
        Malay  0 0 0
        Malayalam  0 0 0
        Maltese  0 0 0
        Mandarin  5 0 0
        Marathi  0 0 0
        Nepali  0 0 0
        Niger-Congo languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Norwegian  0 0 0
        Oromo  0 0 0
        Panjabi (Punjabi)  5 0 0
        Pashto  0 0 0
        Persian (Farsi)  0 0 0
        Polish  10 5 0
        Portuguese  10 5 5
        Romanian  0 0 0
        Rundi (Kirundi)  0 0 0
        Russian  5 0 0
        Rwanda (Kinyarwanda)  0 0 0
        Semitic languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Serbian  0 0 0
        Serbo-Croatian  0 0 0
        Shanghainese  0 0 0
        Sign languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Sindhi  0 0 0
        Sinhala (Sinhalese)  0 0 0
        Sino-Tibetan languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Slavic languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Slovak  0 0 0
        Slovenian  0 0 0
        Somali  0 0 0
        Spanish  30 15 15
        Swahili  0 0 0
        Swedish  5 0 0
        Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino)  5 0 0
        Taiwanese  5 5 0
        Tamil  0 0 0
        Telugu  0 0 0
        Thai  5 0 0
        Tibetan languages  0 0 0
        Tigrigna  0 0 0
        Turkish  0 0 0
        Ukrainian  0 5 5
        Urdu  5 5 5
        Vietnamese  5 5 5
        Yiddish  0 0 0
      Other languagesCensus data footnote 22 0 0 0
  Multiple responses          35 20 15
    English and French  15 10 5
    English and non-official language  25 15 10
    French and non-official language  0 0 0
    English, French and non-official language 0 0 0
Knowledge of official languages
Knowledge of official languages - Total population excluding institutional residentsCensus data footnote 19 8,085 3,740 4,345
  English only 7,520 3,500 4,025
  French only 0 0 5
  English and French 550 235 320
  Neither English nor French 5 5 0
First official language spoken
First official language spoken - Total population excluding institutional residentsCensus data footnote 19 8,090 3,740 4,345
  English 7,965 3,680 4,285
  French 105 50 55
  English and French 5 5 5
  Neither English nor French 10 5 5
Official language minority (number)Census data footnote 23 110 50 55
Official language minority (percentage)Census data footnote 23 1.4 1.3 1.3
Detailed language spoken most often at home
Detailed language spoken most often at home - Total population excluding institutional residentsCensus data footnote 19 8,085 3,740 4,345
  Single responses 8,050 3,725 4,325
    English 7,935 3,660 4,275
    French 30 20 15
    Non-official languages 85 45 40
      Selected Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 20 0 0 0
        Atikamekw   0 0 0
        Cree, n.o.s. 0 0 0
        Dene 0 0 0
        Innu/Montagnais 0 0 0
        Inuktitut 0 0 0
        Mi'kmaq 0 0 0
        Ojibway 0 0 0
        Oji-Cree 0 0 0
        Stoney 0 0 0
      Selected non-Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 21 80 45 40
        African languages, n.i.e. 0 0 0
        Afrikaans 5 0 5
        Akan (Twi) 0 0 0
        Albanian 0 0 0
        Amharic 0 0 0
        Arabic 5 5 5
        Armenian 0 0 0
        Bantu languages, n.i.e. 0 0 0
        Bengali 0 5 0
        Berber languages (Kabyle) 0 0 0
        Bisayan languages 0 0 0
        Bosnian 0 0 0
        Bulgarian 0 0 0
        Burmese 0 0 0
        Cantonese 5 5 0
        Chinese, n.o.s. 5 5 5
        Creoles 0 0 0
        Croatian 0 0 0
        Czech 0 0 0
        Danish 0 0 0
        Dutch 0 0 0
        Estonian 0 0 0
        Finnish 0 0 0
        Flemish 0 0 0
        Fukien 0 0 0
        German 5 0 5
        Greek 0 0 0
        Gujarati 5 0 0
        Hakka 0 0 0
        Hebrew 0 0 0
        Hindi 5 5 0
        Hungarian 0 0 0
        Ilocano 0 0 0
        Indo-Iranian languages, n.i.e. 0 0 0
        Italian 0 0 0
        Japanese 0 0 0
        Khmer (Cambodian) 0 0 0
        Korean 0 5 0
        Kurdish 0 0 0
        Lao 0 0 0
        Latvian 0 0 0
        Lingala 0 0 0
        Lithuanian 0 0 0
        Macedonian 0 0 0
        Malay 0 0 0
        Malayalam 0 0 0
        Maltese 0 0 0
        Mandarin 0 0 0
        Marathi 0 0 0
        Nepali 0 0 0
        Niger-Congo languages, n.i.e. 0 0 0
        Norwegian 0 0 0
        Oromo 0 0 0
        Panjabi (Punjabi) 0 0 0
        Pashto 0 0 0
        Persian (Farsi) 0 0 0
        Polish 0 0 0
        Portuguese 10 0 5
        Romanian 0 0 0
        Rundi (Kirundi) 0 0 0
        Russian 0 0 0
        Rwanda (Kinyarwanda) 0 0 0
        Semitic languages, n.i.e. 0 0 0
        Serbian 0 0 5
        Serbo-Croatian 0 0 0
        Shanghainese 0 0 0
        Sign languages, n.i.e. 0 5 0
        Sindhi 0 0 0
        Sinhala (Sinhalese) 0 0 0
        Sino-Tibetan languages, n.i.e. 0 0 0
        Slavic languages, n.i.e. 0 0 0
        Slovak 0 0 0
        Slovenian 0 0 0
        Somali 0 0 0
        Spanish 20 15 10
        Swahili 0 0 0
        Swedish 0 5 0
        Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino) 0 0 0
        Taiwanese 0 0 0
        Tamil 0 0 0
        Telugu 0 0 0
        Thai 0 0 0
        Tibetan languages 0 0 0
        Tigrigna 0 0 0
        Turkish 0 0 0
        Ukrainian 0 0 0
        Urdu 5 0 0
        Vietnamese 10 5 0
        Yiddish 0 0 0
      Other languagesCensus data footnote 22 0 0 0
  Multiple responses         35 15 20
    English and French 10 5 5
    English and non-official language 25 10 15
    French and non-official language 0 0 0
    English, French and non-official language 0 0 0
Detailed other language spoken regularly at home
Detailed other language spoken regularly at home - Total population excluding institutional residentsCensus data footnote 19 8,085 3,740 4,350
  None 7,830 3,615 4,215
  Single responses  250 125 130
    English  65 35 25
    French  105 45 60
    Non-official languages  85 40 45
      Selected Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 20 5 5 0
        Atikamekw    0 0 0
        Cree, n.o.s.  0 0 0
        Dene  0 0 0
        Innu/Montagnais  0 0 0
        Inuktitut  5 0 0
        Mi'kmaq  0 0 0
        Ojibway  0 0 0
        Oji-Cree  0 0 0
        Stoney  0 0 0
      Selected non-Aboriginal languagesCensus data footnote 21 80 35 40
        African languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Afrikaans  0 0 5
        Akan (Twi)  0 0 0
        Albanian  0 0 0
        Amharic  0 0 0
        Arabic  5 0 5
        Armenian  0 0 0
        Bantu languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Bengali  5 5 0
        Berber languages (Kabyle)  0 0 0
        Bisayan languages  0 0 0
        Bosnian  0 0 0
        Bulgarian  0 0 0
        Burmese  0 0 0
        Cantonese  0 0 0
        Chinese, n.o.s.  0 0 0
        Creoles  0 0 0
        Croatian  0 0 0
        Czech  0 0 0
        Danish  0 0 0
        Dutch  5 5 0
        Estonian  0 0 0
        Finnish  5 0 0
        Flemish  0 0 0
        Fukien  0 0 0
        German  15 5 5
        Greek  5 0 0
        Gujarati  0 0 0
        Hakka  0 0 0
        Hebrew  0 0 0
        Hindi  0 0 0
        Hungarian  0 0 0
        Ilocano  0 0 0
        Indo-Iranian languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Italian  0 0 0
        Japanese  0 0 0
        Khmer (Cambodian)  0 0 0
        Korean  5 0 5
        Kurdish  0 0 0
        Lao  0 0 0
        Latvian  0 0 0
        Lingala  0 0 0
        Lithuanian  0 0 0
        Macedonian  0 0 0
        Malay  0 0 0
        Malayalam  0 0 0
        Maltese  0 0 0
        Mandarin  5 0 0
        Marathi  0 0 0
        Nepali  0 0 0
        Niger-Congo languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Norwegian  0 0 0
        Oromo  0 0 0
        Panjabi (Punjabi)  0 5 0
        Pashto  0 0 0
        Persian (Farsi)  0 0 0
        Polish  5 5 0
        Portuguese  5 5 5
        Romanian  0 0 0
        Rundi (Kirundi)  0 0 0
        Russian  5 0 0
        Rwanda (Kinyarwanda)  0 0 0
        Semitic languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Serbian  0 0 0
        Serbo-Croatian  0 0 0
        Shanghainese  0 0 0
        Sign languages, n.i.e 5 5 0
        Sindhi  0 0 0
        Sinhala (Sinhalese)  0 0 0
        Sino-Tibetan languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Slavic languages, n.i.e 0 0 0
        Slovak  0 0 0
        Slovenian  0 0 0
        Somali  0 0 0
        Spanish  15 5 10
        Swahili  0 0 0
        Swedish  0 0 0
        Tagalog (Pilipino, Filipino)  0 0 0
        Taiwanese  0 0 0
        Tamil  0 0 0
        Telugu  0 0 0
        Thai  5 0 0
        Tibetan languages  0 0 0
        Tigrigna  0 0 0
        Turkish  0 0 0
        Ukrainian  0 0 0
        Urdu  0 0 0
        Vietnamese  0 0 0
        Yiddish  0 0 0
      Other languagesCensus data footnote 22 0 5 0
  Multiple responses          5 0 0
    English and French  5 0 0
    English and non-official language  0 0 0
    French and non-official language  5 5 0
    English, French and non-official language  0 0 0

Symbols

... not applicable

A possible reason for the use of the three dots (...) symbol is:

  • A value that cannot be calculated such as a percentage change where the denominator is zero.

Census data: Footnotes

Footnote 1

Statistics Canada is committed to protect the privacy of all Canadians and the confidentiality of the data they provide to us. As part of this commitment, some population counts of geographic areas are adjusted in order to ensure confidentiality.

Counts of the total population are rounded to a base of 5 for any dissemination block having a population of less than 15. Population counts for all standard geographic areas above the dissemination block level are derived by summing the adjusted dissemination block counts. The adjustment of dissemination block counts is controlled to ensure that the population counts for dissemination areas will always be within 5 of the actual values. The adjustment has no impact on the population counts of census divisions and large census subdivisions.

Return to census data footnote 1 referrer

Footnote 2

A separate set of living quarters designed for or converted for human habitation in which a person or group of persons reside or could reside. In addition, a private dwelling must have a source of heat or power and must be an enclosed space that provides shelter from the elements, as evidenced by complete and enclosed walls and roof, and by doors and windows that provide protection from wind, rain and snow.

Return to census data footnote 2 referrer

Footnote 3

A separate set of living quarters which has a private entrance either directly from outside or from a common hall, lobby, vestibule or stairway leading to the outside, and in which a person or a group of persons live permanently.

Return to census data footnote 3 referrer

Footnote 4

Refers to the age at last birthday before the reference date, that is, before May 10, 2011.

Refer to the Census Dictionary for more information.

Return to census data footnote 4 referrer

Footnote 5

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'.

Return to census data footnote 5 referrer

Footnote 6

Refers to the marital status of the person, taking into account his/her common-law status. For more information, refer to the Census Dictionary: Marital status.

Return to census data footnote 6 referrer

Footnote 7

Census family - Refers to a married couple (with or without children), a common-law couple (with or without children) or a lone parent family. For more information, refer to the Census Dictionary: Census family.

Return to census data footnote 7 referrer

Footnote 8

Census family structure - Refers to the classification of census families into married couples (with or without children of either and/or both spouses), common-law couples (with or without children of either and/or both partners), and lone-parent families by sex of parent. A couple may be of opposite or same sex. A couple with children may be further classified as either an intact family or stepfamily, and stepfamilies may, in turn, be classified as simple or complex. Children in a census family include grandchildren living with their grandparent(s) but with no parents present.

Return to census data footnote 8 referrer

Footnote 9

Non-relatives may be present.

Return to census data footnote 9 referrer

Footnote 10

Refers to the basic division of private households into family and non-family households. Family household refers to a household that contains at least one census family, that is, a married couple with or without children, or a couple living common-law with or without children, or a lone parent living with one or more children (lone-parent family). One-family household refers to a single census family (with or without other persons) that occupies a private dwelling. Multiple-family household refers to a household in which two or more census families (with or without additional persons) occupy the same private dwelling. Family households may also be divided based on the presence of persons not in a census family.

Non-family household refers to either one person living alone in a private dwelling or to a group of two or more people who share a private dwelling, but who do not constitute a census family.

Return to census data footnote 10 referrer

Footnote 11

Refers to households that consist solely of one census family without additional persons.

Return to census data footnote 11 referrer

Footnote 12

Refers to households with opposite-sex or same-sex couples.

Return to census data footnote 12 referrer

Footnote 13

Refers to one-census family households with additional persons and to multiple-census family households, with or without additional persons.

Return to census data footnote 13 referrer

Footnote 14

Refers to households with opposite-sex or same-sex couples.

Return to census data footnote 14 referrer

Footnote 15

Structural type of dwelling - Characteristics that define a dwelling's structure, for example, the characteristics of a single-detached house, a semi-detached house, a row house, or an apartment or flat in a duplex. Refers to the structural characteristics and/or dwelling configuration, that is, whether the dwelling is a single-detached house, an apartment in a high-rise building, a row house, a mobile home, etc.

Return to census data footnote 15 referrer

Footnote 16

Includes mobile homes and other movable dwellings such as houseboats and railroad cars.

Return to census data footnote 16 referrer

Footnote 17

The category 'Other dwelling' is a subtotal of the following categories: semi-detached house, row house, apartment or flat in a duplex, apartment in a building that has fewer than five storeys and other single-attached house.

Return to census data footnote 17 referrer

Footnote 18

Household, private - Person or group of persons occupying the same dwelling. Refers to a person or a group of persons (other than foreign residents) who occupy a private dwelling and do not have a usual place of residence elsewhere in Canada.

Household size - Number of persons occupying a private dwelling. Refers to the number of usual residents in a private household.

Return to census data footnote 18 referrer

Footnote 19

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.

Return to census data footnote 19 referrer

Footnote 20

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.

Return to census data footnote 20 referrer

Footnote 21

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.

Return to census data footnote 21 referrer

Footnote 22

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.

Return to census data footnote 22 referrer

Footnote 23

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.

Return to census data footnote 23 referrer

How to cite

How to cite: Statistics Canada. 2013. Bridgewater, T, Nova Scotia (Code 1206004) (table). National Household Survey (NHS) Profile. 2011 Census. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 99-004-XWE. Ottawa. Released June 26, 2013.
http://www12.statcan.gc.ca/nhs-enm/2011/dp-pd/prof/index.cfm?Lang=E (accessed January 12, 2025).

Data source

2011 Census of Population

Download current census table

  •  CSV (approx. 50 kb)
  •  TAB (approx. 50 kb)

Download census data for complete geographic level

Related links

Map

Map

Map: Bridgewater, Town (Census Subdivision), Nova Scotia

Geographic hierarchy

Geographic hierarchy

Geographic hierarchy: Bridgewater, T, Nova Scotia (Census subdivision)

Note

Note: For more information regarding geographic hierarchies, refer to the Illustrated Glossary: Hierarchy of standard geographic units tutorial.

Related data

Related data

Related data: Bridgewater, Town (Census Subdivision), Nova Scotia

Date modified: