The evolution of language populations in Canada, by mother tongue, from 1901 to 2016

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Canadian Megatrends
Release date: February 21, 2018

At the beginning of the 20th century, the mother tongue of most Canadians was either French or English. In 1901, about one-tenth of the population declared an Aboriginal language or an immigrant language as their mother tongue. The concept of mother tongue was not defined in the Canadian census until 1941, when it was defined as the first language learned at home in childhood and still understood.

Over the next 115 years, Canada's linguistic profile became considerably more diverse. The share of Canadians with French as a mother tongue declined, while the proportion of Canadians whose mother tongue is neither French nor English increased in line with various waves of immigration over time.

This month's issue of Canadian Megatrends tracks the evolution of the Canadian population's composition by mother tongue from 1901 to 2016.

Changes in the three major linguistic groups in Canada

The share of people whose mother tongue is English varied slightly from 1901 to 2016. It was around 60% over this period, ranging from a high of 62.3% in 1911 to a low of 56.5% in 1941. Since 1986, however, this share has been gradually decreasing. In 2016, people with English as their mother tongue accounted for 57.0% of the total Canadian population, compared with 62.2% in 1986.

The share of the population whose mother tongue is English and that of the overall population whose mother tongue is a non-official language evolved in opposite directions; when the share of people whose mother tongue is English increased, the share of those whose with a non-official language as a mother tongue decreased, and vice versa.

From 1901 to 1986, the share of the population with a non-official language as a mother tongue varied between 8% and 13%, reflecting international migratory flows. Without sustained migration, this population tended to decline, as it did from 1931 to 1951, during the 1970s and in the first half of the 1980s.

Since the early 1990s, however, the number of immigrants admitted to Canada has been consistently high—between around 200,000 and 250,000 per year. As a result, in 2016, 22.0% of the total population declared a language other than English and French as a mother tongue. This population is highly heterogeneous in terms of language. In the 2016 Census, more than 130 immigrant languages were recorded.

In the 2016 Census, 213,225 people reported an Aboriginal language as a mother tongue, accounting for 0.6% of the population. Although their enumeration was certainly not complete, the 1901 Census counted close to 77,000 people whose mother tongue is an Aboriginal language, representing 1.4% of the population.

Aboriginal languages in Canada have been evolving over generations. Many Aboriginal languages are unique to Canada, spoken nowhere else in the world. Several Aboriginal languages are now "endangered" with few people reporting speaking them, while a few others are considered "viable" in the long term. Past events have significantly harmed the vitality of Aboriginal languages in Canada. These include the implementation of the residential school system, under which generations of Aboriginal children were not permitted to speak their Aboriginal mother tongues.

The relative share of the population whose mother tongue is French in Canada was also affected by fluctuations in the size of population with a mother tongue other than English or French. The two great waves of immigration in the early 20th century and after the Second World War led to a decrease in the proportion of people whose mother tongue is French. Despite the impact of immigration, people who declared French as their mother tongue maintained their population levels into the 1950s because of high fertility rates. Since the 1951 Census, this population's share has steadily decreased in Canada.

In 1941, 29.3% of the Canadian population declared French as their mother tongue. This was the highest level since 1901. By 2016, this proportion had fallen to 21.0%, a decrease of more than eight percentage points over a 75-year period.

Chart 1. Evolution of the population by mother tongue, as a percentage of the total population, 1901 to 2016, Canada
Description of Chart 1. Evolution of the population by mother tongue, as a percentage of the total population, 1901 to 2016, Canada
Chart 1. Evolution of the population by mother tongue, as a percentage of the total population, 1901 to 2016, Canada
  English French Non-official languages
1901 61.0 30.5 8.4
1911 62.3 27.7 10.1
1921 60.0 27.0 13.1
1931 57.5 27.6 14.9
1941 56.5 29.2 14.3
1951 59.1 29.0 11.8
1961 58.5 28.1 13.5
1971 60.2 26.8 13.0
1981 61.2 25.6 13.1
1986 62.2 25.1 12.7
1991 60.4 24.3 15.3
1996 59.8 23.5 16.6
2001 59.1 22.9 18.0
2006 57.8 22.1 20.1
2011 57.8 21.7 20.6
2016 57.2 20.9 21.9
Source: Statistics Canada, Census of the Population.

Linguistic duality

Canada has two official languages: French and English. In New Brunswick, French an English are the two official languages. In Quebec, French is the sole official language and is spoken by the majority of the population, although English is fairly common in the Montréal region. In the rest of Canada, provinces and territories have adopted their own policies and legislation to protect languages. The Northwest Territories recognize nine Aboriginal languages alongside English and French through its Official Languages Act, while Inuit languages (Inuktitut and Inuinnaqtun), English and French are the official languages of Nunavut.

There are some similarities in the size and evolution of mother-tongue populations in Quebec and across the rest of the country. The majority language groups (French in Quebec, English in the rest of Canada) have maintained a relatively stable population share from 1901 to 2016.

In Quebec, the share of people with French as their mother tongue was around 80% from 1901 to 2001, and then declined, reaching 78.0% in 2016. In the rest of Canada, the share of people with English as their mother tongue varied more over time, fluctuating between 74% and 80% before 1986, and decreasing steadily since. In 2016, the share was 71.8%.

The evolution of official language minority populations has followed a different path than that of majority language populations. The share of Quebec residents whose mother tongue is English has declined since 1901, as has the share of people whose mother tongue is French in the rest of Canada.

The percentage of Quebec's English-mother-tongue population fell by more than half from 1901 to 2016, from 17.4% to 8.1%. In 1901, the French-mother-tongue minority outside Quebec represented 8.2% of the total population outside that province, versus 3.8% in 2016. This was a decline of more than half over the 115-year period.

Chart 2. Evolution of the population by mother tongue, as a percentage of the total population, 1901 to 2016, Quebec and Canada outside Quebec
Description of Chart 2. Evolution of the population by mother tongue, as a percentage of the total population, 1901 to 2016, Quebec and Canada outside Quebec
Chart 2. Evolution of the population by mother tongue, as a percentage of the total population, 1901 to 2016, Quebec and Canada outside Quebec
  English French Non-official languages
Quebec
1901 17.4 80.6 1.9
1911 16.5 80.6 2.8
1921 15.6 80.5 3.9
1931 15.1 80.7 4.1
1941 14.1 81.8 4.1
1951 13.8 82.5 3.7
1961 13.3 81.2 5.6
1971 13.1 80.6 6.2
1981 10.9 82.4 6.7
1986 10.3 82.8 6.9
1991 9.2 82.0 8.8
1996 8.8 81.5 9.7
2001 8.3 81.4 10.3
2006 8.2 79.6 12.3
2011 8.3 78.9 12.8
2016 8.8 77.4 13.7
Canada outside Quebec
1901 80.4 8.2 11.3
1911 80.1 7.0 12.9
1921 76.2 7.4 16.4
1931 73.7 7.3 19.0
1941 73.8 7.8 18.4
1951 77.6 7.3 15.2
1961 76.8 6.6 16.7
1971 78.5 5.9 15.6
1981 79.3 5.2 15.4
1986 80.2 5.0 14.8
1991 77.7 4.8 17.5
1996 76.6 4.5 18.9
2001 75.2 4.4 20.4
2006 73.3 4.1 22.6
2011 73.1 4.0 23.0
2016 71.8 3.8 24.4
Source: Statistics Canada, Census of Population.

Linguistic diversity in Canada

In the last 115 years, the linguistic composition of the population with a mother tongue other than French, English or an Aboriginal language varied considerably in Canada. In 1901, two immigrant language groups accounted for most of this population: Celtic languages (mainly Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic) and German. The Celtic language population declined rapidly in the following decades, both in terms of absolute numbers and population share.

From 1901 to 1941, the German-language population was by far the largest among immigrant-language populations. From 1901 to 1981, most non-official languages in Canada were European. Ukrainian, Russian and Polish increased mainly during the first decades of the 20th century, as settlements spread across the Prairies. Other European languages (German, Italian, Greek and Dutch, among others) made rapid gains following the Second World War.

Chart 3. Evolution of the total population, by selected immigrant languages from early settlements, 1901 to 2016, Canada
Description of Chart 3. Evolution of the total population, by selected immigrant languages from early settlements, 1901 to 2016, Canada
Chart 3. Evolution of the total population, by selected immigrant languages from early settlements, 1901 to 2016, Canada
  Dutch German Greek Italian Polish Russian Ukrainian
1901 F 152,455 F 6,245 5,700 15,240 7,460
1911 5,455 222,370 F 40,925 40,110 42,185 57,520
1921 34,005 275,375 F 53,410 59,000 57,720 131,120
1931 44,580 368,850 7,350 85,520 118,600 50,760 252,800
1941 67,770 331,660 8,745 80,260 128,710 52,435 313,275
1951 100,560 329,305 8,035 92,240 129,235 39,225 352,325
1961 184,480 563,710 40,455 339,625 161,720 42,900 361,500
1971 171,275 558,965 103,730 538,765 136,540 31,955 309,890
1981 158,470 515,510 123,230 531,290 127,400 31,355 285,115
1991 139,035 466,245 126,205 510,995 189,815 35,305 187,015
1996 139,475 470,500 128,085 514,415 222,355 59,630 174,830
2001 133,040 455,545 126,370 493,990 215,010 96,910 157,385
2006 133,240 466,655 123,575 476,905 217,605 136,230 141,805
2011 116,285 430,055 117,890 437,725 201,240 169,950 120,265
2016 107,204 412,257 117,787 413,766 194,102 196,813 113,229

F too unreliable to be published

Note: Data for 1901 on people who declared Dutch as their mother tongue are too unreliable to be published. Data for 1901, 1911 and 1921 on people who declared Greek as their mother tongue are too unreliable to be published.

Source: Statistics Canada, Census of Population.

The composition of immigrant languages changed markedly starting in the 1970s and 1980s. Before the Second World War, parts of the Canadian population already declared a few non-European languages (Chinese, Japanese and Arabic) as their mother tongue. However, changes to immigration laws and rules in the 1960s contributed to a rapid rise in immigration from Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, the West Indies and Africa.

These changes brought about an increase in language diversity. As a result, the number of people who declared Chinese as their mother tongue jumped from less than 100,000 in 1971 to more than 1.3 million in 2016. Since the mid-1980s, many other language groups have experienced similar changes. These populations have grown steadily, as a result of immigration trends over the period.

Chart 4. Evolution of the population whose mother tongue is a Chinese language, 1901 to 2016, Canada
Description of Chart 4. Evolution of the population whose mother tongue is a Chinese language, 1901 to 2016, Canada
Chart 4. Evolution of the population whose mother tongue is a Chinese language, 1901 to 2016, Canada
  Chinese
1901 16,470
1911 28,410
1921 38,450
1931 46,110
1941 33,500
1951 28,285
1961 49,100
1971 95,915
1981 224,135
1986 308,515
1991 498,845
1996 736,010
2001 872400
2006 1,015,230
2011 1,112,610
2016 1,312,859

Note: Chinese languages comprise Cantonese, Hakka, Mandarin, Min Dong, Min Nan (Chaochow, Teochow, Fukien and Taiwanese), Wu (Shanghainese) and other Chinese languages not otherwise specified or indicated elsewhere.

Source: Statistics Canada, Census of population.

Chart 5. Evolution of the total population, by selected immigrant languages from recent settlements, 1971 to 2016, Canada
Description of Chart 5. Evolution of the total population, by selected immigrant languages from recent settlements, 1971 to 2016, Canada
Chart 5. Evolution of the total population, by selected immigrant languages from recent settlements, 1971 to 2016, Canada
  Persian Punjabi Urdu Vietnamese Tagalog Spanish Arabic Portuguese
1971 .. .. .. .. .. 23,945 28,520 85,840
1981 .. 53,770 11,925 28,380 .. 70,150 49,645 164,615
1986 13,820 80,630 17,770 51,795 68,670 104,150 57,045 180,760
1991 40,625 136,460 24,900 78,565 99,715 177,425 107,750 212,090
1996 62,380 214,535 43,725 111,910 158,205 228,575 166,155 222,875
2001 96,510 284,750 86,805 126,760 199,770 260,785 220,535 222,855
2006 138,075 382,590 156,415 146,410 266,445 362,120 286,790 229,285
2011 177,010 459,990 194,100 153,355 384,055 439,110 374,415 225,530
2016 225,792 544,761 243,431 167,785 512,167 497,496 488,189 239,030

.. not available for a specific reference period

Note: Data for 1971 on Persian, Punjabi, Urdu, Vietnamese and Tagalog languages are not available. Data for 1981 on Persian and Tagalog languages are not available.

Source: Statistics Canada, Census of Population.

Definitions

Mother tongue
First language learned at home in childhood and still understood at the time of the census. For the definition used in the censuses at the beginning of the 20th century, see Houle et Cambron-Prémont (2015).
Aboriginal languages
Languages native to the North American continent. These include Cree languages, Inuktitut and Dene, among others.
Immigrant languages
Languages—other than French, English and Aboriginal languages—whose presence in Canada is originally due to immigration. These include German, Chinese, Ukrainian, Spanish, Italian and Punjabi, among others.
Non-official languages
Aboriginal and immigrant languages combined.

References

Houle, René and Amélie Cambron-Prémont. 2015. "Les concepts et les questions posées sur les langues aux recensements canadiens de 1901 à 1961." Cahiers québécois de démographie, vol. 44, no. 2, pages 291 to 310 (French only).

Houle, René. 2012. "Immigrant languages in Canada," Census in Brief, Statistics Canada, catalogue no. 98-314-X.

Lachapelle, Réjean and Jacques Henripin. 1980. The demolinguistic situation in Canada: Past trends and future prospects. Montréal, Institute for Research on Public Policy.

Lachapelle, Réjean and Jean-François Lepage. 2010. Languages in Canada: 2006 Census. Ottawa, Canadian Heritage and Statistics Canada.

Contact information

For more information, or to enquire about the concepts, methods or data quality of this release, contact René Houle (rene.houle@canada.ca; 613-854-8473), Centre for Ethnocultural, Language and Immigration Statistics.

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