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Old 11-21-2010, 07:38 PM
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Smile How many Americans know French? Who are they?

How many Americans know French? Who are they? We answer these and related questions in this post.

Roughly speaking, 1.6 million Americans age 5+ speak French at home. Six times as many adults (age 18+), about 10 million, can converse in French, and comprise 4.4 percent of US adults. In contrast, in the UK, a fraction twice as large, about 9% of adults (age 15+) have more than basic French skills. In France, about 20 percent of adults (age 15+), and 33 percent of those ages 15-29 have more than basic English skills.

In America, over 13 million people report their dominant ancestry as French. About HALF as many Canadians, 6.6 million, speak French at home, 91% resident in Québéc. About 3 million Québécois, some 41%, are bilingual. The population of metropolitan France is 63 million, about five times as numerous as nominal Franco-Americans.

<big><big>French surnames - provincial per capita densities</big></big>



The continuing advance of English has academic fallout. Only 44% of US high school students and less than 8% of US university undergrads study foreign languages. The fraction of European Union high school students who study a foreign language is 48% in the UK, 81% in Ireland and 96% to 100% in other nations.

In the US, French is spoken mainly by the Louisiana Creole, native French, Cajun, Haitian, and French-Canadian populations. French is the second de facto language in the US state of Louisiana (where the French dialect of Cajun/Creole predominates). The largest [at-home] French-speaking communities in the United States reside in Northeast Maine; Hollywood and Miami, Florida; New York City; certain areas of rural Louisiana; and small minorities in Vermont and New Hampshire. Among US adults who can converse in French, WOMEN OUTNUMBER MEN ALMOST (23/12) TWO TO ONE. The proportion of Americans who speak French as a second language increases with advanced education

<big><big>US regions where French is spoken at home</big></big>

<table width="435" align="center"><tr><td>At-home French language distribution in the United States. Counties and parishes marked in yellow are those where 6% to 12% of the population speak French at home; brown, 12% to 18%; red, over 18%. Cajun French and French-based creole languages are not included even though the Creole dialects are spoken throughout the U.S. and taught in many U.S. schools.</td></tr></table>

Last edited by FanDeAliFee; 03-23-2011 at 10:23 AM.. Reason: add map of French surnames - provincial per capita densities
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