Talking Canadian

Type
Audio/Visual
Authors
Filmakers Library, inc., ( Margaret Slaght; )
 
Category
Audio-Visual Media  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
2004 
Publisher
Filmakers Library, United States 
Duration
44 min 
Subject
English language -- Canada. English language. Canada. 
Abstract

Why do English-speaking Canadians talk the way we do? Why do we say couch instead of chesterfield, windshield instead of windscreen, and ee-ther and eye-ther sometimes interchangeably? Why do Newfoundlanders have a distinctive accent and use colourful words like ballicatter that can't be heard anywhere else? How have French words like portage and prairie, and Native words like chipmunk and toboggan become part of our everyday speech? Few of us are aware that the language we speak -- the words we use and the way we say them -- has less to do with conscious choice than it has to do with our past: when and why we came here, where we settled and the tug of war between British and American influences which have been part of our lives for centuries. But Talking Canadian is not so much a history lesson as an often-amusing look at our accent, intonation and vocabulary -- how Canadians speak today and how we will talk in the future.  
Biblio Notes
Genre/Form: Documentary films
Material Type: Clipart/images/graphics, Internet resource, Videorecording
Document Type: Internet Resource, Computer File, Visual material
All Authors / Contributors: Margaret Slaght; Filmakers Library, inc.,
OCLC Number: 1112136029
Language Note: In English.
Notes: Title from resource description page (viewed June 18, 2019).
Description: 1 online resource (44 minutes)
Responsibility: directed and produced by Margaret Slaght.  
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