「French-Canadian」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 96件
| language in his bid to converse in a bad | French-Canadian accent, and always wore a characteristic |
| It starred | French-Canadian actor Gilles Pelletier as Corporal Jacque |
| August 28, 1952 in Montreal, Quebec) is a | French-Canadian actor. |
| He married the | French-Canadian actress Louise LaTraverse and had one son |
| La Forest, Thomas J., "Our | French-Canadian Ancestors" |
| Baez is of Puerto Rican, | French-Canadian, and Portuguese descent.. |
| His father is | French-Canadian and his mother is English-Canadian. |
| s including Le Voyageur, many about local | French-Canadian and Catholic culture and history. |
| 549 | French-Canadian associations or institutions were invited |
| : the English rose, the Irish clover, the | French-Canadian beaver and the Scottish thistle." |
| The | French-Canadian Brigade was an intended unit in the Canad |
| In need of | French-Canadian Cabinet ministers, Prime Minister Joe Cla |
| She holds dual | French-Canadian citizenship, but has never, she says, con |
| ay consist of marches, Johann Strauss II, | French-Canadian classics, Leroy Anderson, and Christmas c |
| -Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville, a | French-Canadian colonizer, encountered the Ouachita in 17 |
| The Mira Foundation (Fondation Mira) is a | French-Canadian community-based organization which pursue |
| parish of Notre Dame de Lourdes, a large | French-Canadian congregation located in the city's Flint |
| e seen Mackinac Island is Jean Nicolet, a | French-Canadian coureur de bois, during his 1634 explorat |
| Belgo was founded in 1992 by | French-Canadian Denis Blais and Anglo-Belgian Andre Plisn |
| While most residents were of | French-Canadian descent, many of the founding families ha |
| He is of | French-Canadian descent. |
| seasons of the English version, features | French-Canadian doctors in a similar-looking set with the |
| not bad) and some would nickname him the | French-canadian Don Cherry |
| he son of, Pierre-Jean-Baptiste Falcon, a | French-Canadian employee of the North West Company (for w |
| Marquette was joined by Louis Jolliet, a | French-Canadian explorer. |
| rn in Grafton, North Dakota, to a largely | French-Canadian family. |
| Marcil was born to a | French-Canadian father and Irish mother. |
| e Yards, 2000; The Moderns, 1988; and the | French-Canadian film Les Portes Tournantes, 1988. |
| tiation (English: Here and Now) is a 1970 | French-Canadian film. |
| The 1961 film marked a shift among | French-Canadian filmmakers at the NFB away from folkloric |
| to the early 2000s a jazz version of the | French-Canadian folk song "Vive la Canadienne" (arranged |
| Grrr...), a | French-Canadian former pro-gamer, won an early starleague |
| een related to Michel Branamour Menard, a | French-Canadian fur trader and a founder of Galveston, Te |
| Antoine Louis Ouilmette (1760-1841) was a | French-Canadian fur trader who was one of the earliest no |
| ieaux) (May 5, 1757 - July 1, 1852) was a | French-Canadian fur trader and first permanent white sett |
| se and St. Anne pay tribute to the area's | French-Canadian fur-trading heritage. |
| al, this event celebrates the community's | French-Canadian hertitage through a variety of events whi |
| toured Canada as a backup singer with the | French-Canadian hip hop group Dubmatique, performing befo |
| This article is about the | French-Canadian ice-hockey player. |
| imaging and explores issues of Mohawk and | French-Canadian identity through the prism of colonialism |
| October 1, 1925 - April 1986), the son of | French-Canadian immigrants, was a drug trafficker, burgla |
| A | French-Canadian in Paris (journal/essay), ISBN 2-914679-1 |
| Chase-Casgrain was the lone | French-Canadian in the prosecution. |
| h Osler and others, Casgrain was the only | French-Canadian in the group. |
| ontreal's Le Devoir newspaper and by some | French-Canadian intellectuals as well as their support fo |
| ptiste Society was established to promote | French-Canadian interests within Canada and to preserve t |
| ance of demographic balance and appointed | French-Canadian Joseph Royal as his Provincial Secretary. |
| Jos Montferrand (1802-1864), legendary | French-Canadian logger and strongman |
| phen W. Kearney of Fort Crawford arrested | French-Canadian logger Jean Brunett who Street had report |
| And Ti-Jean, an giant 10 year old | French-Canadian lumberjack boy of Canada. |
| At one time, the legendary | French-Canadian lumberjack Joseph Montferrand worked for |
| was the exaggerated startle reflex among | French-Canadian lumbermen from the Moosehead Lake region |
| er Pieere "Pig's Eye" Parrant, a probably | French-Canadian man who became the first resident of Sain |
| In March 1826, a | French-Canadian man named Methode, his Native American wi |
| version of the song was produced for the | French-Canadian market. |
| geon (1810 - July 17, 1897) was the first | French-Canadian mayor of Bytown, Canada. |
| with the Seven Years' War intensifying, a | French-Canadian military commander took charge of a garri |
| The | French-Canadian ministers in Cabinet, and Quebec in gener |
| n project, reducing the input of Canada's | French-Canadian minority over the results. |
| uage in schools alienating the province's | French-Canadian minority. |
| was born in Tel Aviv, Israel to a Morocco | French-Canadian mother and a British father. |
| , New York and moved to Montreal with her | French-Canadian mother at the age of eight, following her |
| In 1818 Jacques Vieau hired another | French-Canadian named Solomon Juneau, who later married h |
| itoba school crisis, and led to a rise in | French-Canadian nationalism. |
| the best CEO of the year by La Presse, a | French-Canadian newspaper. |
| all Quebeckers rather than only those of | French-Canadian or Catholic origins. |
| s "large teat" in French, named by either | French-Canadian or Iroquois members of an expedition led |
| Loisel were first-generation Americans of | French-Canadian parents. |
| Lortie, OC, CQ (born 27 April 1959) is a | French-Canadian pianist. |
| "Rainy Drinkwater" and announced that the | French-Canadian player was instead from the Caughnawaga I |
| aid of Damphousse at that time that among | French-Canadian players, only Mario Lemieux was more skil |
| imarily in Manitoba, which has a sizeable | French-Canadian population--in early 1917. |
| Quebec City, July 16, 1913) was a | French-Canadian priest and academic. |
| de Calgary to a mission parish founded by | French-Canadian priests in the 1870s. |
| 7, 1939 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada) is a | French-Canadian professional motorcycle racer and father |
| creation of the 22nd Infantry Battalion ( | French-Canadian) required large rallies of French-Canadia |
| nche (30 April 1849 - 26 July 1916) was a | French-Canadian Roman Catholic priest, Bishop, and Vicar |
| Pierre Granche (1948-1997) was a | French-Canadian sculptor. |
| both Native Americans and the children of | French-Canadian settles of the French Prairie at a small |
| Lucille Starr, | French-Canadian singer |
| uest vocals in English, and one featuring | French-Canadian singer Marie-Mai providing guest vocals i |
| ian named Thomas Edison in Radio-Canada's | French-Canadian sitcom L'auberge du chien noir. |
| s, featuring two English-Canadian and two | French-Canadian stamps. |
| e Appalachian clogging, English clogging, | French-Canadian step dancing, Irish step dancing, and Sou |
| The steeples are topped with standard | French-Canadian tin and bells. |
| espite the fact that Sacagawea's husband, | French-Canadian trader Toussaint Charbonneau, was in real |
| killed his first man at age twenty-two, a | French-Canadian trapper named Antoine Primeau, who simply |
| Indian girls to Toussaint Charbonneau, a | French-Canadian trapper. |
| Rue des Pignons was a | French-Canadian TV series which ran from 1966 to 1977. |
| Wisconsin, in 1808, to Michel Brisbois, a | French-Canadian voyageur, and his second wife Domitelle ( |
| The | French-Canadian voyageurs would carry two 40 kg (88 lb) p |
| e and began hiring substantial numbers of | French-Canadian voyageurs for trading expeditions to the |
| s a professional journalist and the first | French-Canadian woman to preside over the Senate. |
| niversity in Montreal, where he married a | French-Canadian woman. |
| es that his Catholicism and marriage to a | French-Canadian, Yvonne Desaulniers, would help the party |
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