Name of Quebec City explained

The official name of Quebec City is Québec (with an acute accent), in both official languages of Canada (Canadian English and Canadian French alike). This name is used by both the federal and provincial governments. The acute accent differentiates between the official English name of the city named Québec, and the constitutional English name of the province named Quebec, spelled without any diacritics.

Distinction with the province

In unofficial English texts, the accent is often dropped and Québec is informally referred to as "Quebec City".[1] In French, names of geographical regions such as provinces and countries are typically preceded by articles whereas city names are not (unless it is part of the name, such as "La Malbaie"). As a result, the province is called French: le Québec ("in Quebec" = French: au Québec, "from Quebec" or "of Quebec" = French: du Québec) while the city remains simply French: Québec ("in Québec City" = French: à Québec, "from / of Quebec City" = French: de Québec).[2] Where context requires further differentiation, words such as "French: la ville de Québec" and "French: la province de Québec" can be used (taking care not to capitalize the word "French: ville").

Other names

The name of the municipal corporate body instituted to govern Québec is French: i=unset|Ville de Québec, in both English and French.[3] This naming convention applies to all municipal corporations in the province (e.g. French: i=unset|cat=no|[[Montreal|Ville de Montréal]] is the corporate body governing Montréal, etc.) Thus, where "French: i=unset|Ville de ..." is capitalized, it means the corporate body and it is not part of the toponym (Montréal, Québec), but is the incorporated name of the city. In the English section of French: i=unset|Ville de Québec's official website, the city is variously referred to as "Québec" and "Québec City" (with an accent) whereas the corporate body is referred to as "City of Québec".

Quebec City is sometimes referred to as "French: la capitale nationale" ("the national capital"). The government officially named it this way under the French: i=unset|cat=no|[[Union Nationale (Quebec)|Union Nationale]] party. The provincial administrative region where the city is situated bears the name French: i=unset|cat=no|[[Capitale-Nationale]] (capitalized). The word French: national is the adjective for the noun French: nation used in its normal basic sense and refers to Quebec as a nation within the country of Canada, and has no indication of sovereignty.[4]

Demonyms

Residents of Québec are called, in French, French: Québécois (male) or French: Québécoise (female). To avoid confusion with French: cat=no|[[Québécois (word)|Québécois/e]] meaning an inhabitant of the province, the term French: Québécois/e de Québec for residents of the city is sometimes used. In English, the terms Quebecer (or Quebecker) and Québécois/e are common.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Government of Canada . Public Services and Procurement Canada . Québec, City of Québec, Quebec City – Writing Tips Plus – Writing Tools – Resources of the Language Portal of Canada – Canada.ca . Writing Tips Plus . 20 May 2022 . 28 February 2020.
  2. Web site: Québec en quelques mots . Immigrant Québec . 20 May 2022 . fr-CA . 22 October 2021.
  3. Web site: Charter of Ville de Québec . 2008-04-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080606004103/http://www.iijcan.org/qc/laws/sta/c-11.5/20061117/whole.html . 2008-06-06 . dead .
  4. News: House passes motion recognizing Québécois as nation . CBC.ca . 2007-03-24 . 2006-11-27.