CANADA- Provinces + Territories explained (Geography Now!)

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2018
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Комментарии • 3,9 тыс.

  • @grigoryzinoviev244
    @grigoryzinoviev244 5 лет назад +3688

    Ottawa is the capital city of Canada. Toronto is actually the capital city of Ontario.

    • @Blandanomics
      @Blandanomics 5 лет назад +41

      True

    • @sominboy2757
      @sominboy2757 5 лет назад +330

      Alberta-texas
      British Columbia-california
      Saskatchewan- colorado
      Mantioba- illinois
      Ontario-New York
      Quebec- Louisana
      Prince Edward Island- Rhode Island
      New Brunswick- Maine
      Nova Scotia-Alabama
      Newfoundland and Labrador-Mississippi
      Northwest Territories-Alaska
      Nunavat-Alaska
      Yukon- Alaska

    • @matf5593
      @matf5593 5 лет назад +35

      Yeah, that's true... But who cares!!!! Lol
      désolé!

    • @Ice_Karma
      @Ice_Karma 5 лет назад +113

      @@sominboy2757 Nova Scotia is the most populous and cosmopolitan of the Maritime Provinces. Alabama isn't really a good comparison... maybe more like Massachusetts.

    • @sominboy2757
      @sominboy2757 5 лет назад +5

      @@Ice_Karma trailer park boys?

  • @Yahiko25
    @Yahiko25 5 лет назад +653

    For Newfoundland... on 9/11 all the plane were force to land the nearest airport. Gander is a small town but they had to host 33,000 people and there weren't enough hotels to cover all the "tourist". So the residence of the town allowed the "tourists" to stay at their homes until the planes got word they can fly again.
    16 years later that story became a Broadway musical... "Come From Away" and that show got robbed of a Tony award.
    WELCOME TO THE ROCK!

    • @newfieocean
      @newfieocean 5 лет назад +49

      It was actually 7,000 but for a town of 10,000 it was an amazing accomplishment to feed, cloth, and board all of them. I'll never forget that week. Soo many people. Imagine your towns population almost doubling in 4 hours..

    • @newfieocean
      @newfieocean 5 лет назад +7

      And yes robbed indeed, we got to see that play first at our local Art and Culture center. They used us for rehearsals before Broadway haha.

    • @kassandracox7047
      @kassandracox7047 5 лет назад +5

      I'm glad to see I'm not the only one still salty about the 2017 Tony's.

    • @moonori4595
      @moonori4595 5 лет назад +2

      Grahamfield25 I am from Newfoundland and I can confirm.

    • @acadiant2756
      @acadiant2756 5 лет назад

      Haha poor newfies

  • @bodymuezik
    @bodymuezik 4 года назад +241

    I am an Acadian and I don't like how he said that we migrated to Louisiana. That makes it sound like we decided to move there on our own volition.
    We were mass deported by the British. The event was called le grand dérangement.

    • @yutengcui7419
      @yutengcui7419 4 года назад +1

      La déportation des Acadiens

    • @akshudhavala836
      @akshudhavala836 3 года назад +6

      I actually think he explained this better in the official Canada video.

    • @MrWaldorfian
      @MrWaldorfian 3 года назад +6

      deportation (to me anyway) implies that they were sent back where they came from but the did not come from Louisiana. I would call it being expelled. The British didn't send them anywhere, they just wanted the Acadians to leave.

    • @jeremiedomenico
      @jeremiedomenico 3 года назад +3

      Je sais, ça m'a profondément déçu aussi de ce que qu'il disait au sujet du Québec. Tellement que j'ai arrêté de suivre sa page à cause de ça. Qu'il invite quelqu'un du pays dont il parle c'est super, mais de biaiser l'information comme ils l'ont fait c'est profondément dérangeant.

    • @Xerxes2005
      @Xerxes2005 3 года назад

      @@MrWaldorfian Well, you have the wrong definition.

  • @korelly
    @korelly 5 лет назад +545

    The Acadians did not migrate to Louisiana, they were deported by the English from 1755.

    • @maxime5217
      @maxime5217 4 года назад +12

      @Allan Tidgwell Pretty much and until 'La Proclamation Royale' they weren't able to come back... Once some of them came back they found there houses and stuff burned and weren't able to owe fields until few years after

    • @christiansaint-pierre5360
      @christiansaint-pierre5360 4 года назад +5

      The Acadians were deported in the 13 colonies and some of them in France and United Kingdom . Some that were to be deported to the falklands made a mutinery and deturned the ship to Louisiana . And some others got there from the 13 colonies too , by foot , when they were kind of captive there, or after they obtain the right to leave , after the war .

    • @madisonthorne4181
      @madisonthorne4181 4 года назад +2

      And the Acadians took land from
      The first settlers of Canada the First Nations

    • @TheWho58
      @TheWho58 4 года назад +13

      @@madisonthorne4181 lol the Acadians and Miꞌkmaq Mixed and lived together, today many Acadians have Miꞌkmaq blood and vice versa

    • @ATMDPNKBJ
      @ATMDPNKBJ 3 года назад +2

      Allan Tidgwell migrate generally implies you chose to move no need to be pedantic.

  • @nelsonricardo3729
    @nelsonricardo3729 5 лет назад +747

    The capital of Ontario is … oh, wait 500 other people already commented on this.

    • @cente14
      @cente14 5 лет назад +1

      999 I AM PRINCE EDWARD. 999

    • @patmclean1951
      @patmclean1951 5 лет назад +4

      How was the noted incorrectly? Wow. Aaron you live in Hamilton.....

    • @joshzaretsky7753
      @joshzaretsky7753 4 года назад

      Nelson Ricardo lol I was about to

    • @abbad707
      @abbad707 4 года назад

      lmfao

    • @abbad707
      @abbad707 4 года назад

      @@cente14 ?

  • @nikphys
    @nikphys 5 лет назад +516

    one small correction! The capital and largest city of Ontario is Toronto, not Ottawa. However Ottawa is the capital of Canada .

    • @haregewoyinkassaye4494
      @haregewoyinkassaye4494 5 лет назад +6

      True

    • @DTMB35
      @DTMB35 5 лет назад +20

      Fairly large mistake

    • @ravieromartino7244
      @ravieromartino7244 5 лет назад +7

      how did he not know? hes from Hamilton

    • @triciabarr4620
      @triciabarr4620 4 года назад +3

      Thanks for reminding the rest of Canada and the world..lol I'm born and raised in Ontario and obviously I'm well aware of this but many others may have forget...lol

    • @kdonnellyc1974
      @kdonnellyc1974 2 года назад +1

      I came to the comments to mention this lol

  • @Varekai0723
    @Varekai0723 5 лет назад +821

    The Canadian guy needs to brush up on his geographical knowledge of his own country.

    • @carolweideman1905
      @carolweideman1905 4 года назад +135

      He is from Southern Ontario, what do you expect.

    • @EvilDaveCanada
      @EvilDaveCanada 4 года назад +7

      Lord Selkirk of Scotland founded what became the City of Selkirk just north of Winnipeg.

    • @RogersMgmtGroup
      @RogersMgmtGroup 4 года назад +34

      Yup Southern Ontario, nearly Toronto, people often have no idea about the rest of Ontario or the rest of Canada.

    • @laurenzo9160
      @laurenzo9160 4 года назад +47

      He's from Ontario so to his credit he's basically American

    • @marschallblucher6197
      @marschallblucher6197 4 года назад +7

      Well from what I know, with the exception of the maritime provinces, people don't really visit the other provinces. Occasionally people will cross from Ontario to Quebéc but that's it...

  • @Jonathan2342
    @Jonathan2342 5 лет назад +689

    Guy from Ontario doesn’t even know his own province.

    • @Justtc
      @Justtc 4 года назад +29

      Yeah.. That was embarrassing, eh!

    • @theboxfamily196
      @theboxfamily196 4 года назад +6

      That would be embarrassing

    • @youpedia4614
      @youpedia4614 4 года назад

      I'm dead🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @Funnybriton
      @Funnybriton 4 года назад +2

      Cringe. So much cringe. Da pain

    • @TheMuddySea
      @TheMuddySea 4 года назад +28

      Yeah, he's from Hamilton though, so he might just have a general "fuck Toronto" attitude.

  • @GeographyNow
    @GeographyNow  5 лет назад +513

    Hehe.... Regina.
    Hope you enjoy this filler week episode! Thanks to all you Canadians that helped with it and especially guest star- Aaron!
    Update WHOA Sorry got the whole "Tornto/ Ottawa thing wrong! Haha, Ottawa is for all of Canada and Toronto is the capital of Ontario"

    • @sacroimperioromanogermanic8088
      @sacroimperioromanogermanic8088 5 лет назад +1

      There is no brazilian portuguese translation?

    • @tianab17
      @tianab17 5 лет назад

      YEAHHH

    • @cave3141
      @cave3141 5 лет назад

      Geography Now please do regions of the Philippines

    • @OverdaleRd
      @OverdaleRd 5 лет назад +15

      When you are talking about Native people from Canada, they're called Native Canadians, not Native Americans. And Toronto is the Capital of Ontario. Ottawa is the capital of Canada.

    • @yourboiabid4828
      @yourboiabid4828 5 лет назад +2

      Can you do British territories next as a different filler week episode

  • @Ice_Karma
    @Ice_Karma 5 лет назад +561

    Fun fact: Many people learn Standard French instead of Canadian French in school, and thus have major difficulties understanding Québec French speakers.

    • @maximeschmitt6589
      @maximeschmitt6589 5 лет назад +113

      Fun fact: French teachers in English Canada can't speak French so they teach neither Canadian French nor European French. They just teach rubbish French.

    • @TAKEmeTOtheMORGUE
      @TAKEmeTOtheMORGUE 5 лет назад +80

      Fun fact: every francophone learnt standard French at school, but none of them actually speaks it because everyone has an accent. ;)

    • @manhoosnick
      @manhoosnick 5 лет назад +55

      It's the same French as here in France just the accent is different.

    • @Ice_Karma
      @Ice_Karma 5 лет назад +29

      @@TAKEmeTOtheMORGUE Fun fact: As far as I'm aware, Francophone universities in Quebec require you to sit an entrance exam that, among other things, measures your proficiency at Standard French, and that aspect is, I'm told, very difficult. =3

    • @Ice_Karma
      @Ice_Karma 5 лет назад +32

      @@manhoosnick Written Quebec French is fairly close to Standard French except in vocabulary, but as you progress towards more informal spoken varieties, it diverges both in lexis and in grammar-as I'm well aware informal spoken varieties in, say, France also diverge. Admittedly, a large part of my difficulty with Quebec French, beyond the accent, is having been taught very little _colloquial_ French, of _any_ dialect.

  • @katieandkevinsears7724
    @katieandkevinsears7724 4 года назад +238

    Question:
    How much of the northern part of Canada is habitable?
    Answer:
    Nunavut

  • @gk6525
    @gk6525 5 лет назад +14

    People in Quebec actually speak a dialect of French that is older than what is commonly spoken in France now. One French king (I believe it was Louis XIV or XVI) changed the way people in France spoke by decree. This was after Quebec was mostly settled, so the people from there speak French a little differently than you would hear in France.

  • @ekn_38
    @ekn_38 5 лет назад +188

    Alberta: 1:45
    British Columbia: 2:28
    Manitoba: 3:07
    New Brunswick: 3:58
    Newfoundland and Labrador: 4:47
    Nova Scotia: 5:54
    Ontario: 6:38
    Prince Edward Island: 7:24
    Québec: 8:03
    Saskatchewan: 9:03
    Northwest Territory: 9:56
    Nunavut: 10:39
    Yukon: 11:27

    • @novaexplorer2397
      @novaexplorer2397 5 лет назад +5

      This, this is helpful

    • @stefanjones9966
      @stefanjones9966 5 лет назад +7

      Ekn _38 Newfoundland not New Foundland

    • @newfieocean
      @newfieocean 5 лет назад

      @@stefanjones9966 thanks lol

    • @darreljones8645
      @darreljones8645 5 лет назад +5

      TL;DR version:
      The Maritime Provinces (New Brunswick, Newfoundland & Labrador, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island): The New England of Canada.
      Quebec: The Louisiana of Canada.
      Ontario: The New York of Canada.
      Manitoba: The Minnesota of Canada.
      Saskatchewan: The Iowa of Canada.
      Alberta: The Texas of Canada.
      British Columbia: The California of Canada.
      The Territories (Northwest, Nunavut, Yukon): The Alaska of Canada.

    • @EugeneAyindolmah
      @EugeneAyindolmah 5 лет назад +1

      @@darreljones8645 Manitoba and British Columbia are even shaped like Minnesota and California

  • @williedavis9465
    @williedavis9465 5 лет назад +411

    Québécois French is different from France French because Quebec was colonized before the French Revolution. After the Revolution, France made a concerted effort to use the French of the commoners rather than the nobility. Quebec was part of the British Empire at the time and did not follow suit, leading to a bisection of the language.

    • @mattbenz99
      @mattbenz99 5 лет назад +35

      Fun fact: Quebec French is used more in the realm of international relations than France French. This is because France French is more modern and is based off the Parisian dialect during the French Revolution. Most former French colonies have an easier time understanding Quebec French than France French.

    • @snipershadow3011
      @snipershadow3011 5 лет назад +90

      @@mattbenz99 This is not true at all. Former French colonies in Africa, in the Pacific Ocean, in the Carribean learn the France version of French. Even those close to Canada like St Pierre and Miquelon have an easier time with the French dialect.
      I'd say the only ones who have an easier time understanding Quebec French would be the Acadians and the Cajuns.

    • @rachidikhlef8192
      @rachidikhlef8192 5 лет назад +17

      mattbenz99 [Canadian Gambit] that’s right! The former French colonies speak a formal academic french. But some you need to know guys, Quebec has brought to the the French language more than any other French speaking country including France. All the female job names where created by Quebec. In France the title of Doctor is given to both male and female whereas in Quebec There are Doctor and Doctoresse

    • @rachidikhlef8192
      @rachidikhlef8192 5 лет назад +12

      mattbenz99 [Canadian Gambit] there is no difference between the Quebec French and France French when it comes to education! The difference is in the spoken French

    • @andrewcooper9467
      @andrewcooper9467 5 лет назад +19

      Most of the Québécois people originally came from northern France so the French in Normandy and Rouen speak a closer accent. Also Acadian French is also different from Quebec French.

  • @samovarmaker9673
    @samovarmaker9673 5 лет назад +827

    Stop it, I'm having Nunavut.

    • @kamchatka1528
      @kamchatka1528 5 лет назад +33

      I have waited all my life waiting for some kind of reason to live your pun sir has given me life. I thank you.

    • @platbear9103
      @platbear9103 5 лет назад +8

      stop

    • @OBBWMD
      @OBBWMD 5 лет назад +9

      Y E S

    • @liamandzach5139
      @liamandzach5139 5 лет назад +2

      Samovar maker nice

    • @MichaelSIngle-gn9qz
      @MichaelSIngle-gn9qz 5 лет назад +1

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @kerriwilson7732
    @kerriwilson7732 5 лет назад +444

    Acadians migrated to Louisiana? Yeah, at the point of a gun.

    • @minimouette
      @minimouette 5 лет назад +4

      that was explained in an other of his video

    • @EdinburghFive
      @EdinburghFive 5 лет назад +20

      The Acadian were forced out of Nova Scotia and none were deported to Louisiana. They did go there on their own but of course they felt they could not return to Nova Scotia as their lands had been given to other settlers.

    • @gaelfortier2668
      @gaelfortier2668 4 года назад +6

      @@EdinburghFiveThats not what we are taught in québec... British had taken acadian that were not willing to be a subject of the queen by force and they sent them in louisiana...

    • @EdinburghFive
      @EdinburghFive 4 года назад +8

      Hi @@gaelfortier2668 - Sorry to hear that you were provided with erroneous information at school. Also it was not that the Acadians were unwilling to be subject to the king (no queen reigning in Britain at that time) as in fact they had already provided an oath to the crown on that very point. It was they wanted to remain neutral in any conflict between Britain and France. This neutrality had been achieved but in 1755 the British colonial government at Halifax demanded the Acadians take an unqualified oath which technically would mean the Acadians were no longer neutral. In the build up to the Sevens Years War there had been a few instances that left the British in double as to the Acadian's trustworthiness and then by refusing the unqualified oath it made these Acadian British subjects in the eyes of the British colonial administration potential rebels.

    • @roykelly5486
      @roykelly5486 4 года назад +1

      i'm Acadian , it's better than being killed or else I wouldn't be here,:)eh

  • @BadassBeazly
    @BadassBeazly 5 лет назад +130

    It seems to me that the word "sorry" is used to indicate respect and humility for the other when you have inconvenienced someone. It's not an admission of wrong doing, it's just an ingrained social grace to smooth things over after an awkward encounter. I'm from Halifax, Nova Scotia.

    • @sklaWlivE
      @sklaWlivE 5 лет назад +4

      This usage, is probably why we Canadians have that "polite stereotype" going on...since it's not used in an admission of guilt, it can also be a declaration of empathy to the plight of the subject, even if the speaker doesn't have any connection to the plight itself. Sort of a: "That sucks, I hear and understand you, and am capable of empathizing with your unfortunate situation."
      I would venture and further state that the use of "eh?" at the end of a statement or suggestion, is another such linguistic artifact in our speech and generalized macro-culture. Sort of a "I'm stating this as a fact or a suggestion, but the inclusion of a question at the end, means that I am not trying to be forceful or pushy about it, eh?" In some cases "eh?" could be used as a short hand for "what do you think about this?", an open invitation for others to speak their mind and get their own input in, inherent to the speech pattern.
      Just a theory though, eh?

    • @ClumpypooCP
      @ClumpypooCP 5 лет назад

      do you say "hard" and "heart" like "hah-rd" and "hah-rt"

    • @ianlangsev5828
      @ianlangsev5828 5 лет назад +5

      Minnesota does the same exact thing. But hey!... most people call us Southern Canada anyways.

    • @Kman31ca
      @Kman31ca 5 лет назад +1

      @@ianlangsev5828 I'm from Alberta, and I say "hey", instead of "Eh" as well. But alot say "Eh" here as well.

    • @Kman31ca
      @Kman31ca 5 лет назад +5

      I think your right. Sorry to me, is almost a way of just being polite, friendly, especially when talking with people I don't know. I think it could be linguistically interchanged with "Pardon me" in a lot of usages. I find for the most part, I'll say it when bumping through a crowd while shopping on a busy day. And will also use pardon me, but that's in a more jovial, playful tone.

  • @ieshi23
    @ieshi23 5 лет назад +475

    When I was younger I wanted to go to Pancake Island, but my parents were having Nunavut

    • @darkace98
      @darkace98 5 лет назад +55

      Yukon’t be serious

    • @shaunakj8081
      @shaunakj8081 5 лет назад +7

      Then where Tuva want to go?

    • @worth4909
      @worth4909 5 лет назад +21

      I have a yellow knife and I'm not afraid to use it

    • @horseplop9
      @horseplop9 5 лет назад +5

      I live in Nunavut yellowknife is Awesome

    • @horseplop9
      @horseplop9 5 лет назад +2

      @@s_naz281 PEI is a Joke we all laugh at you.. Are there even people,on the island anymore?

  • @SylvainsRamblings
    @SylvainsRamblings 5 лет назад +561

    GN: "Winnipeg is the murder capital of Canada"
    Thunder Bay, Ontario: *"hold my beer!"*

    • @Kasrasfriedchicken
      @Kasrasfriedchicken 5 лет назад +22

      Regina: Hold my beer

    • @billyboy4797
      @billyboy4797 4 года назад +14

      Thunder Bay is pretty rough.

    • @TheChuckfuc
      @TheChuckfuc 4 года назад +4

      I'm pretty sure saskatoon has that title.

    • @rick1329
      @rick1329 4 года назад +14

      Winnipeg-Violent Crime Capital of Canada and Auto Theft Capital of North America. Coldest City in The World over 500k pop.

    • @johonanandrewgomes7593
      @johonanandrewgomes7593 4 года назад +2

      @@rick1329 it's the coldest city counting windchill with a population over 600000, bratsk Russia is just as cold or slightly colder

  • @NathanielChristopher
    @NathanielChristopher 4 года назад +68

    1:21 Canadian territories *do* have their own governments and are not directly administered by the federal government as Aaron erroneously claims. The biggest differences between provinces and territories is that provinces receive their legislative authority from the Constitution whereas territories receive legislative authority from the federal government through devolution, similar to Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland.

  • @hide904
    @hide904 5 лет назад +222

    @9:06 DAMMIT BARB, I HAD MY VOLUME ALL THE WAY UP AND MY FAMILY HEARD.

  • @MyLittleGreenHairdedMermaid
    @MyLittleGreenHairdedMermaid 5 лет назад +61

    As a person from Saskatchewan, the bottom half is flat lands but the north is all trees. As for some things about us: we like camping and fishing, farming is a big industry here, we have the highest crime rates, like Manitoba we have a high Native American population, strip clubs are illegal because of archaic rules, drinking age is 19, we were the province that started free healthcare. Manitoba's quote "I was born here what's your excuse" fits us very well.
    Edit: How the hell did I forget Corner Gas, thank you Logi

    • @KendrickMan
      @KendrickMan 5 лет назад +4

      very beautiful in northern Sask. one of the few old growth forests i've been to, it made quite the impression.

    • @sklaWlivE
      @sklaWlivE 5 лет назад +3

      ...Also, you would not actually want to run away from the law here...they can track you by the naked eye for miles XD
      Sorry, had to get the "flattest province" jokes in there.

    • @elia_bellia4966
      @elia_bellia4966 5 лет назад

      REGINAAAAA (sorry)

    • @1st1anarkissed
      @1st1anarkissed 5 лет назад

      Thanks! yep. Saskatoonian here. I hear the hippies are gearing up for another logging fight. Seems the industries are trying to clearcut some very valued chunks of boreal forest. Keep your ear tuned!

    • @CanuckGod
      @CanuckGod 5 лет назад +1

      As a person from Manitoba who has lived in Calgary for almost 16 years, I still hate the Roughriders with a passion... Blue and Gold for life :)

  • @nicobandit8604
    @nicobandit8604 5 лет назад +28

    As someone from PEI your info about us in 1800's clothes running through fields is 100% correct

    • @lc4lyf
      @lc4lyf 4 года назад +3

      Gabe Carter-Caseley right? we all wear suspenders and dresses and we’re all farmers

    • @ZakhadWOW
      @ZakhadWOW 3 года назад

      I blame that Megan Fellowes woman ! It's all her fault!

  • @bluecoldtails6884
    @bluecoldtails6884 4 года назад +87

    Alberta: I'm the coldest!
    Newfoundland and Labrador: Hold my mispronounced name.

    • @Alice-mb3xf
      @Alice-mb3xf 3 года назад +6

      Alberta u ain’t even close. FIGHT MANITOBA

    • @piadas804
      @piadas804 3 года назад +3

      Nunavut

    • @jordialfonzo3242
      @jordialfonzo3242 2 года назад +1

      @@piadas804 its not a province

    • @gdmusician8708
      @gdmusician8708 2 года назад +1

      @@jordialfonzo3242 provinces AND territories

  • @jeffsanders1609
    @jeffsanders1609 5 лет назад +41

    4:23 My great great grandfather immigrated to Louisiana from New Brunswick!
    He first immigrated there as a teenager from France and then decided he's rather love somewhere warm than cold so he immigrated again to Louisiana in his 20's.
    Thanks for talking about my family history!

  • @danielleweisz6495
    @danielleweisz6495 5 лет назад +56

    The Territories (Nunavut, the Northwest Territories, and the Yukon) do have their own governments. They just have less autonomy than the provincial governments, but they do create their own policies and legislation, have their own education systems, and have a consensus government called a Legislative Assembly (at least in the NWT).
    Guys, I don't want to be mean here, but a simple google search would have cleared this up for you. I know you have a disclaimer, but just because someone is from Canada, doesn't guarantee they understand how the country works.

    • @APortugueseinCanada
      @APortugueseinCanada 5 лет назад +4

      Also, one of the main differences between Provinces and Territories is that unlike Provinces, where there's a Lieutenant Governor as the Queen's representative in each Province, each Canadian Territory has a Commissioner, who represents the federal government and not the Queen (Territories do not have a Queen's representative).

    • @justschr
      @justschr 5 лет назад

      A Portuguese in Canada They do in the form of the Governor General as regardless of limited devolved powers they still fall under federal jurisdiction...

  • @Turdnugget1989
    @Turdnugget1989 5 лет назад +66

    I live in Saskatoon. And we actually have a lot more going on in Saskatchewan than people give the province credit for. Saskatoon was actually name #18 on the New York Times top 50 best places to visit in the world

    • @ZakhadWOW
      @ZakhadWOW 3 года назад +1

      I VOTED FOR MOOSE JAW

    • @Ortium
      @Ortium Год назад

      i knew it

    • @pouks
      @pouks 9 месяцев назад +1

      I don't know about it but saskatoon's got a cool name

  • @jmlkinc
    @jmlkinc 5 лет назад +96

    "I like how you pronounce 'Bilingual'" "We enunciate better" -> Immediately get an ad for Grammarly.

    • @PockASqueeno
      @PockASqueeno 4 года назад +2

      jmlkinc I’m American, and I pronounce “bilingual” that way.

  • @stephanecaron8894
    @stephanecaron8894 5 лет назад +54

    A correction on your initial comment RE: Canada's territories:
    They do have their own governments, but they are not independently sovereign, like the provinces are (ie: the provinces get their authority from the Canadian [originally British] Crown [which is why the provinces each have their own Lieutenant Governor], while the territories get their sovereignty from the Federal Government).
    Or put another way, the territories are creatures of the Federal Government like how municipalities are creatures of the provincial governments.

  • @lenaarkenberg9434
    @lenaarkenberg9434 5 лет назад +77

    Don't feel any forcing that you have to do a germany states video because I see many peole asking. Just do what you're intersted in, and if you've the sources to do it.
    I'm from Germany and I can wait.

    • @horseplop9
      @horseplop9 5 лет назад +1

      Hey im Interested How many states are in Germany?? And If i Want to Visit an Area that likes trump which is it?? Im not Into Socialism at all

  • @jamesmcnaughton9575
    @jamesmcnaughton9575 5 лет назад +36

    Territories in Canada do have their own governments and they are called territorial governments
    ...as in Yukon Territorial Government....provinces have powers over resources and taxation that are not afforded territories....however, there are many things ( such as drivers licences) are issued by the territorial gov.....

  • @smackky
    @smackky 4 года назад +48

    Nobody:
    Museums in Nove-Scotia: *hey kids wanna learn about the halifax explosion?*

    • @ZakhadWOW
      @ZakhadWOW 3 года назад +3

      I learned about that reading a small book about great disasters (along with Hindenburg, etc) back in the mid 70s. HIGH-FIVE to me for actually knowing obscure stuff aboot Canuckistan...

    • @kayleekirkpatrick9193
      @kayleekirkpatrick9193 3 года назад +2

      yup but i wanna go to all of them. I read a single book on that subject and now i’m obsessed with it.
      If you wanna know the book it was called “No Safe Harbour” and it’s from almost a series except it’s not all made by the same person, anyway it’s from a series called “Dear Canada”

  • @coletitus6364
    @coletitus6364 5 лет назад +105

    There is some things that may have been left out that I want to put out.
    1. Canada first got its roots for the Confederacy in Charlottetown, PEI. All Starting with Sir. John A. MacDonald and Sir George Etienne Cartier.
    2. The very first province that was settled by Europeans was Newfoundland by the Nordic People. They only stayed temporarily cause they were fought out of the area by the Native People.
    3. Nova Scotia is the first actual landing site of French, British, Irish, and Scottish people, and is also one of the provinces with the most descendants of the Loyalists. During the American Revolution.
    4. Annapolis Royal or during its time, Port Royal was once the Capital of Canada when it was still a colony. That is why when you pass by on the Highway 101, it says "Cradle of our Nation."
    5. Canada also shares military personnel between provinces during the summer for the Cadet Organization. Sending Cadets aged 12-18 to different training centres for their experiences and new ways of approaching problems and solving them, as well as receiving their specific training for Air, land and sea.
    6. Canada still has people of L'Acadie descent in the Maritime provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. They speak with a slightly different accent, and some words mean different than Québécois french and France.
    7. Tim Hortons is one of our most popular places to get coffee (STILL IS) but it was beaten by the McCafe brand of coffee by McDonalds. McDonalds kept the original blend, making it taste slightly better than the current 100% Arabica Coffee.
    That's pretty much all I got. Hope this helps out in the end. Hello from Annapolis, Nova Scotia!

    • @weav0303
      @weav0303 5 лет назад +3

      Just on #3 here, the loyalists did go to both New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, but their main landing site was in Parr Town and Carlton on May 18th 1783 with over 2000 loyalists arriving. Parr Town and Carlton amalgamated to form Saint John in 1785 and making Saint John the first incorporated city in Canada. Saint John is sometimes referred to as the "city of loyalists". Cheers from Saint John, New Brunswick.

    • @zedbe7
      @zedbe7 5 лет назад

      @@weav0303 Also, those people are the ones who deported over 20 000 acadians over Lousiana, France, Maine, North New-Brunswick, Cape-Breton island etc. Nicely done by you two !

    • @crowellaur
      @crowellaur 5 лет назад +1

      From Halifax!

    • @adriansookai
      @adriansookai 5 лет назад

      r/iamverysmart

    • @christiansaint-pierre5360
      @christiansaint-pierre5360 4 года назад

      I would not say that the viking settling site in Newfoundland was a " province " .

  • @6alecapristrudel
    @6alecapristrudel 5 лет назад +199

    Do the buildings of the Vatican! Hahahahh

  • @rafm3068
    @rafm3068 Год назад +1

    I enjoy your videos, you are among the few that are able to explain a nation's history and culture accurately and with proper context in a short amount of time.
    Keep working hard and doing great work!!

  • @NikhileshSurve
    @NikhileshSurve 3 года назад +31

    7:17 I personally find that quite amazing.
    9:24 If Saskatchewan was part of US then the US map would look like a fist showing the middle finger.

  • @Robin-yf6yl
    @Robin-yf6yl 5 лет назад +135

    Could you do the autonomous regions of Spain? Might be a tricky one (Catalonia and Basque Country) but definitely interesting!

  • @Joeljdwatts
    @Joeljdwatts 5 лет назад +250

    Territories have their own governments. They just leave more responsibility to the federal government than the provinces.

    • @ARCtheCartoonMaster
      @ARCtheCartoonMaster 4 года назад +13

      Yeah, I was confused when he mentioned that bit; I was like, "Wait... So why do they have capitals, then?"

    • @blakecampanella2502
      @blakecampanella2502 4 года назад +3

      @@bochijaramillo5708 could you explain?

    • @bochijaramillo5708
      @bochijaramillo5708 4 года назад +1

      Blake Campanella no. Could * you* explain?

    • @blakecampanella2502
      @blakecampanella2502 4 года назад +4

      @@bochijaramillo5708 you're the one refuting it, that's why I'm asking you why.

  • @skynatkee
    @skynatkee 4 года назад +98

    6:40 A guy from Hamilton doesn’t even know the capital of Ontario when it’s a 30 minute drive away

    • @MrWaldorfian
      @MrWaldorfian 4 года назад +7

      its a 30 minute drive at 1am. The rest of the time its gridlocked.

    • @james.8060
      @james.8060 3 года назад +4

      Hamilton has a fuck Toronto attitude as well. so, unless you live around here, you wont catch the "shade thrown"

    • @novaexplorer2397
      @novaexplorer2397 3 года назад

      I mean, throwing shade is good and all, until it interferes with the accuracy of an educational program

    • @mikefung9145
      @mikefung9145 3 года назад +1

      @@MrWaldorfian This guy QEWs

    • @brosandshortfilms7647
      @brosandshortfilms7647 2 года назад +1

      More like 5 hours minus traffic.

  • @iann399
    @iann399 5 лет назад +43

    Being from Regina Saskatchewan I knew he was gonna do that when Saskatchewan came up 😂😂😂😂

    • @annaabrams8738
      @annaabrams8738 4 года назад +4

      Why hello Ian. I too am Canadian (but from Alberta).
      Seriously this is like the only time I've seen someone besides me have that name lol.

    • @Lucabnt
      @Lucabnt 3 года назад +1

      i am canadian from ontario toronto

  • @bootht99
    @bootht99 5 лет назад +123

    I think Manitoba is so unknown by people from other provinces because hardly anyone lives there. There also isn't really any noteworthy attractions to bring people, aside from Churchill, or hunting and fishing if you're an American. If you remove the Winnipeg greater area from the population, the rest of the province only has about 560,000 people. Realistically, Saskatchewan is more densely populated, and has many more larger centers (smaller cities) than Manitoba.
    Having traveled extensively throughout MB and SK, MB is BY FAR the flatter province! The Red River Valley is actually one of the flattest areas in North America. Even up north, Manitoba is insanely flat. You can drive from Emerson to Thompson (860km) with only driving over a few rolling hills near Grand Rapids and closer to Thompson. Saskatchewan as a whole is quite hilly, just not mountainous. MB is essentially a toilet bowl, with water from Alberta, Saskatchewan, North Dakota, and a bit of Ontario and Minnesota drain through Manitoba and into the Hudson Bay.
    Manitoba does have a lot of amazing places, but they are very spread out. You have to drive for hours to visit most of them. Some of the most amazing places in the province are fairly unknown and fairly undeveloped for public access. As someone who grew up in rural MB, the thing about MB that annoys me the most is how EVERYTHING is centered around Winnipeg. So much so, that it is helping kill off the rural areas, as services are being removed and people are expected to travel to the city for everything. Without those services, it becomes undesirable to live there, so business and people leave. Also, the people who have lived in Winnipeg all their lives often suffer from Perimeteritis, and can't imagine the province outside of the Perimeter Highway around the city. This gets very dangerous when politicians have this... Rural and Northern MB suffer badly.
    As a whole, I would say Manitobans are usually pretty humble people. I'm proud to be from Manitoba, but I really would like to move to Yukon, NWT, NW Ontario, BC, or yes, even SK! Too bad all of my family lives here....

    • @heronimousbrapson863
      @heronimousbrapson863 5 лет назад +8

      Lots of people would like to move to BC, but the cost of living there is too high.

    • @madisonthorne4181
      @madisonthorne4181 4 года назад +4

      The territories are the lest populated and actually the coldest no many options for jobs compared to most places in Canada good place to go if you want to rough it out or see the northern lights as they part of the northern lights oval

    • @tylertheroux4627
      @tylertheroux4627 4 года назад

      Where in Manitoba are you from?

    • @j.wright5371
      @j.wright5371 4 года назад +1

      Take a look at material on "primate cities" or "primacy". It will expand on what you have described. Primate cities are at least twice as large as the next largest city in the region (country, for example) in which they exist. As a consequence of primacy, they usurp the resources of the area in which are located. There is an extensive geographical literature on the topic or look at Wikipedia.

    • @MrAlen6e
      @MrAlen6e 4 года назад

      You could move to North BC or Yukon, is becoming quite develop

  • @BeEmoBro
    @BeEmoBro 5 лет назад +62

    Barb you should do china provinces!!!

    • @BeEmoBro
      @BeEmoBro 5 лет назад +4

      There is something on the internet that is called wikipedia.@@KuyaBJLaurente

    • @RenegadeShepard69
      @RenegadeShepard69 5 лет назад

      @Salvador Laurente Jr. he can definetly collab for some research with one of the english speaking youtubers in china, like laowhy or serpentza.

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer 5 лет назад

      @@KuyaBJLaurente he does have subscribers who live in Hong Kong. and they will be familiar with mainland china. also with in the USA there are very big populations of Chinese descendant.

    • @raediaufar4454
      @raediaufar4454 5 лет назад

      Actually a lot of people from china do watch youtube, there's even native chinese youtuber with >100k subs out there

    • @flyingdreams5005
      @flyingdreams5005 5 лет назад

      There are way too many provinces(22) in China, not even including the autonomous regions(5), the municipalities(4) and the special administrative regions(2). As the difference within the provinces could be huge, it might be challenging to provide a general introduction like this one. BTW, the contents could be very controversial (for they Chinese apparently) when introducing Tibet and East Turkestan(AKA Xinjiang). But would be alright if they are not his subscribers, LOL

  • @tctlunar3488
    @tctlunar3488 5 лет назад +18

    Pronunciation:
    Charlottetown = Charlotte-Town

  • @99rylee
    @99rylee 5 лет назад

    theres quite a bit I didn't know about my own country. Thanks for the upload, it was fun to watch.

  • @VoIcanoman
    @VoIcanoman 5 лет назад +34

    I am a Manitoban, born and bred (although I spent a few years in Montreal in my 20s), and they're sorta right, we are generally outdoors-y types. Lots of people own or rent cottages on one of the roughly 100,000 lakes we have here, and hiking, camping, snowmobiling, hunting and fishing are all really popular activities (I know a few people who hunt, but I don't think it's as common as the others on that list). It gets really cold here in the winter, and fairly hot in the summer - we are actually one of the places that has the greatest temperature extremes in the world. There are 90 degrees Celsius between our coldest extreme temperature (-47.8 C) and our hottest (42.2 C) - only a couple places in Siberia can top that. Normally in a winter we'll hit -38 C at least once, but we rarely get colder than that these days (climate change!)...the coldest temperature I have personally witnessed here was -42 C (wind chill was -57 or something crazy). In the summer, we've been hitting 37-38 C at least once as well, sometimes a bit hotter.
    As for Winnipeg being the "murder capital" of Canada, we have held that title 20 times out of the 37 years I've been alive. It's calculated on a per capita basis, so where you said 6 murders, I believe the stat is actually 6 murders *PER 100,000 PEOPLE.* Incidentally, that number is basically an all-time high (and was set several years ago) - currently, we sit at just 3.5 homicides per 100,000 people. If Winnipeg was an American city, we would currently sit 66th in per capita murders for cities over 250,000 people (between Santa Ana, California and Mesa, Arizona)*.
    *Those stats are from the last US Census, so things have almost certainly changed in the interim; if you want to compare apples to apples and judge Winnipeg's rate at the time of the last US census, there would be about 50 US cities with higher murder rates.

    • @evankrosney6759
      @evankrosney6759 5 лет назад +6

      Also, I'm fairly certain that the "we were born here, what's your excuse?" phrase was just something ripped from The Simpsons. I've personally never heard anybody use that phrase outside of referring to the TV show.

    • @RosinGoblin
      @RosinGoblin 5 лет назад

      I went to Flin Flon for fishing once

    • @bootht99
      @bootht99 5 лет назад +4

      @@evankrosney6759 Ya, it was on a road sign in Manitoba when they visited Winnipeg. I've heard quite a few people use it, including myself, but only after that episode aired. Its such a true statement. I can see someone not understanding it if they have "perimeteritis"

    • @ronaldoseven4865
      @ronaldoseven4865 5 лет назад +1

      Manitoba has the cool tourist spot where you can explore to see polar bears and have a taste of the Arctic nature. Suddenly, I am from Ontario and I have never went anywhere outside of Ontario.

    • @Logan-zj7og
      @Logan-zj7og 5 лет назад

      Volcanoman damn didn’t have to write an essay about Manitoba not much to love here

  • @rastkosehovic3294
    @rastkosehovic3294 5 лет назад +36

    You don't really show where the provinces are when you present them. Just a suggestion to fix that next time

    • @MsChantae
      @MsChantae 3 года назад

      yeah, was hoping for more map action :)

  • @user-uf5dt5rz8t
    @user-uf5dt5rz8t 5 лет назад +8

    Not sure if this has been mentioned already, but worth noting that Nova Scotia also has a sizeable French-speaking population, especially in Cape Breton!

  • @kurtmill9080
    @kurtmill9080 5 лет назад

    Cool thanks for sharing more about our country! I actually learned a bit too. :)

  • @ivanpetrov5258
    @ivanpetrov5258 5 лет назад +46

    The Balkan Peninsula next pls

    • @crashiecorbashie
      @crashiecorbashie 5 лет назад +5

      i can arleady see the comments

    • @nbksrbija1039
      @nbksrbija1039 5 лет назад +7

      This comment says something about my people group and therefore attacks me personally so I will write a 20 line comment explaining the entire history of Alexander the Great, Balkan Wars, Yugoslav wars, Eastern Roman Empire and Albanian demographics.

    • @Mystakaphoros
      @Mystakaphoros 5 лет назад

      @@crashiecorbashie same lol

  • @YourPalAlRetroGamer
    @YourPalAlRetroGamer 5 лет назад +262

    Can you do France's regions?

    • @YourPalAlRetroGamer
      @YourPalAlRetroGamer 5 лет назад +16

      No, France got 18 regions (12 in mainland Europe). These regions are subdivided into states.

    • @mrsimh1733
      @mrsimh1733 5 лет назад

      yes yes yes yes

    • @DavidDanos
      @DavidDanos 5 лет назад +6

      Une belle transition depuis cette chapitre canadienne serait s'ils examinent d'abord St Pierre et Miquelon

    • @antoinesimon6126
      @antoinesimon6126 5 лет назад +1

      @Jérémie Lambert il y a environ 100 départements en effet mais pas régions.

    • @user-gr9fq9gt9w
      @user-gr9fq9gt9w 5 лет назад +2

      So far in this series, there were only federations and France is not a federation.

  • @milsh4ke
    @milsh4ke 2 года назад +5

    Wow, as a Quebecois, I didn't expected such an effective description of my Province by 2 english speakers xD

  • @mrgeorgejetson
    @mrgeorgejetson 5 лет назад +6

    Dude, for an American your faux-Quebecois pronunciation of "poutine" is actually pretty spot-on! Also, I had no idea that "sorry" was a Canadian-American shibboleth (as is the name of my beloved hometown, "Montreal," incidentally). Cool!

  • @Jegrygerfede
    @Jegrygerfede 5 лет назад +15

    Provinces of Iran could be awesome. Very diverse and very cool.

  • @hassancheema6542
    @hassancheema6542 5 лет назад +80

    States of Germany next!

    • @KanyeTheGayFish69
      @KanyeTheGayFish69 5 лет назад +1

      Albie Mayo these provinces are each like five times the size of Germany

  • @crazygood150
    @crazygood150 5 лет назад +6

    There’s very little corn grown in Saskatchewan, mostly canola, wheat, barley etc.

  • @cecetom8460
    @cecetom8460 4 года назад

    Another great video guys! Keep it up.

  • @nolynste1926
    @nolynste1926 5 лет назад +49

    Here's some ideas for the administration division vids
    Mexico
    Germany
    Sweden
    Poland
    Egypt
    Indonesia
    Spain
    France
    Greece
    Italy
    Jordan
    Reply with more ideas if you want

    • @archyarchfiendx2938
      @archyarchfiendx2938 5 лет назад

      IndoNazi

    • @3seven5seven1nine9
      @3seven5seven1nine9 5 лет назад

      Every single county of Texas

    • @nolynste1926
      @nolynste1926 5 лет назад

      @@FlamesOfTyphon agreed, but Germany has some awesome states with amazing history

    • @nolynste1926
      @nolynste1926 5 лет назад

      @@FlamesOfTyphon they could get a German, that would probably help a lot. Either way, Germany should be in the spotlight again. They finally conquered Europe, this time through trade, diplomacy, and peace.

    • @ianlangsev5828
      @ianlangsev5828 5 лет назад

      🇳🇴 *NORWAY* 🇳🇴

  • @SadieQuinnSpiritBears9776
    @SadieQuinnSpiritBears9776 5 лет назад +4

    Thanks for giving us some valuable screen time! Also just to clarify, Canada’s native people are collectively referred to as the First Peoples, which include the First Nations, Inuit, and Métis. There’s hundreds of sub-groups and languages within these.

  • @meysamshojaee4746
    @meysamshojaee4746 3 года назад

    Awesome:) I was looking for the pronunciation of the territories, but this video was so attractive and made me watch it all:)

  • @mybackup5206
    @mybackup5206 Год назад +3

    The cajuns “migrated” to Louisiana is a way to explain it, definitely not gonna mention that they were brutally forced by the British to go there (and other places) and that a giant percentage of the population died on the way there due to infection/starvation ect. 🙃

  • @Skeekiest
    @Skeekiest 5 лет назад +22

    Do Australia please!

  •  5 лет назад +66

    Please make limberwisk's provinces now. Im very confused!

    •  5 лет назад +3

      @Albert Miller wow nice life story u got there mate, maybe I'll visit your native country if a geography channel would review your provinces.

    • @PartyDude_19
      @PartyDude_19 5 лет назад

      yes

    •  5 лет назад

      @Albert Miller no sorry, I know a guy that works at bandia terra's embassy in Botswana

    • @marchmadnessrecaps5
      @marchmadnessrecaps5 5 лет назад

      I LOVE THIS

    • @carultch
      @carultch 4 года назад

      Limberwisk is Svalbard.

  • @OMGitsGODx
    @OMGitsGODx 4 года назад

    Fun facts: Tuktoyaktuk is the northern most town (hamlet) you can drive to as of 2017. It's located in the Northwest Territories and is located on the Arctic Ocean, and is the only place in Canada that is accessible by road and touches the Arctic Ocean.

  • @justbe1451
    @justbe1451 3 года назад

    Watching in the beginning was painful & I was moving on, but the information saved you.
    Be proud of your intelligence & keep sharing!

    • @MsChantae
      @MsChantae 3 года назад +1

      supposedly some of the info is wrong. this video literally took me about 2 years to watch

  • @FPSGamer48
    @FPSGamer48 5 лет назад +4

    So happy you did Canada! Us Canadians (and half-Canadians in my own case) thank you!
    Suggestions for future regions: China, Mexico, the United Kingdom (like the Hebrides, Orkney Islands, Isle of Man, Northern Ireland, Gibraltar, etc), Italy, and Japan.
    Keep up the great work!

  • @gott7574
    @gott7574 5 лет назад +396

    Do Germany!

    • @pear6554
      @pear6554 5 лет назад +21

      9

    • @mario7049
      @mario7049 5 лет назад +2

      @@pear6554 Ha, I get it

    • @mario7049
      @mario7049 5 лет назад +7

      @Leeber Gruber wie ist es arrogant? Ich will auch so ein video sehen....

    • @berat2323
      @berat2323 5 лет назад

      pe ar 😂😂😂

    • @tannerwilson4843
      @tannerwilson4843 5 лет назад +3

      I thought he did 🇩🇪 already!

  • @fergalfarrelly8545
    @fergalfarrelly8545 4 года назад

    Thank you for mentioning the Navajo connection. 800 years ago a migration of dene went south. My late wifes family speaks dene wich is still close enough to Navajo that they can understand each other so i hear from a first hand source.

  • @anumpreto
    @anumpreto 5 лет назад

    Definitely the best Filler Week video!!!

  • @kaylahay23
    @kaylahay23 5 лет назад +9

    Also, as a Manitoban, I pronounce Charlottetown as Charlotte-town... no 'ton'. So that's interesting!

    • @Jeremithiah
      @Jeremithiah 5 лет назад +9

      As someone who lives there, it's pronounced Charlotte-town. No 'ton' indeed.

    • @xXPyrophorusXx
      @xXPyrophorusXx 5 лет назад +1

      I'm an Ontarian and I use -town as well.

  • @maclennanld
    @maclennanld 5 лет назад +17

    Nova Scotia was not a colonization attempt by Scotland, that was Belize. The large Scottish population was largely the result of fleeing persecution by the English after the Jacobite rebellion

    • @jj70098
      @jj70098 Год назад +1

      As well as the highland clearances

    • @RivuletClone
      @RivuletClone 2 месяца назад

      It was technically a Scottish colony for a very short time though, according to google at least.

  • @ricequin
    @ricequin 5 лет назад +2

    In my village of Menstrie in Clackmannanshire, near Stirling in Old Scotland there is a park called Nova Scotia Gardens because of Menstrie’s historical connection to the province: King James VI of Scotland’s chartered lieutenant to Nova Scotia was born in Menstrie Castle. The flag flying there alongside the St. Andrew’s Cross confounded me for years until I noticed the information board I had obviously been walking past for years without seeing.

  • @TributetoCanada
    @TributetoCanada 3 года назад

    Hooray for this!!!

  • @conradtiedeman3
    @conradtiedeman3 5 лет назад +11

    The territories do have their own governments and can make their own laws. The difference is how their powers were delegated to them by the British North America Act, and later the Constitution Act. Also, The capital of Ontario is Toronto, while the Capital of Canada is Ottawa.

  • @thelongslowgoodbye
    @thelongslowgoodbye 5 лет назад +98

    "The country over all is spaced out"
    Yeah and even more spaced out now since Marijuana has been made totally legal in Canada.

    • @Justtc
      @Justtc 4 года назад +1

      ..i am surprised B.C. bud wasn't mentioned..

    • @bbictorr
      @bbictorr 3 года назад +1

      Only uptight, left-leaning, law abiding suburban people & casual users buy legal weed. Dispensaries charge double the street price. And it’s dry as hell - no need to cut or grind, just squeeze it w your fingers..even the stems crumble. The rest of us with brain power still hit up the weird dealers

    • @GOAT_GOATERSON
      @GOAT_GOATERSON 3 года назад +1

      Laughs in Dutch

    • @L_back
      @L_back 3 года назад

      @@GOAT_GOATERSON Mark Rutte? More like Mark ROTTEN

    • @GOAT_GOATERSON
      @GOAT_GOATERSON 3 года назад

      @@L_back ja heb ook niet op hem gestemd

  • @lizardwizard2444
    @lizardwizard2444 5 лет назад +4

    The way Paul pronounced poutine gave me goosebumps

    • @MsChantae
      @MsChantae 3 года назад

      in a good way or bad way?

  • @dylansmith4907
    @dylansmith4907 5 лет назад +2

    Awesome video guys! I work out in Hamilton myself. Just a couple things, first, the island of Newfoundland has its own time zone, Labrador shares a time zone with the other maritime provinces, the accent out there can range from completely unintelligible to easy to understand. My father comes from a small town not far from Dildo (ha lol) where the accent is not well understood by city folks. St. John's has lots of people from across the country and is much easier to understand. Finally on that Nunavut pronouncing issue, it's "noo-nah-voot". Keep up with the great videos Barby!

  • @claraciresola16
    @claraciresola16 5 лет назад +14

    Do a Italian regions explained video please!!

    • @rebeccabonnicirebygotitall
      @rebeccabonnicirebygotitall 5 лет назад +1

      Yes! Would love to know more about them, especially Sicily and Sardegna. Ciao da Malta 🇮🇹🇲🇹

  • @BrandonToy1996
    @BrandonToy1996 5 лет назад +7

    Should have mentioned that Regina is home to the famous Mounties (RCMP) training depot!

  • @cathyandriamiadanarivo7504
    @cathyandriamiadanarivo7504 4 года назад

    Thanks guys! I learnt a lot from ya

  • @marschallblucher6197
    @marschallblucher6197 5 лет назад +60

    I'm Canadian I just pronounce it "Charlotte town" as in a literal Town {7:30}

    • @bobbiusshadow6985
      @bobbiusshadow6985 5 лет назад +3

      Town? City? ... There's no consensus defining a difference between them, but I agree, a town is, by popular definition, smaller than a city. A city/prefecture/region is also called a metropolis when its population has surpassed 5 million inhabitants. And is called a megacity after 20 million (if I remember correctly the #).

    • @bobbiusshadow6985
      @bobbiusshadow6985 5 лет назад +1

      My personal qualifiers: A town has less than 1 million.. a city has more than 1 million ... Some people would disagree though, i.e. Seattle < 1 M, but they label themselves a city...

    • @RealConstructor
      @RealConstructor 4 года назад +3

      Bobbius Shadow There is no international consensus. I live in The Netherlands and our biggest town/city is Amsterdam, about 800.000 inhabitants. There is an historical definition. Towns got city right from the regional ruler (count, king etc). In our country there are cities with only 1400 inhabitants, like Bredevoort who got city rights in 1388, or Stavoren with about 900 inhabitants who got city rights in 1061. City rights meant that they got their own monetary right, judicial system and tax system. And they needed to fortify their town with city walls with a gate, or canals with a drawbridge. Nowadays we call buildup areas with about 50-100k inhabitants cities if they have their own board or administrative body (municipal) and enough services, like hospital, schools, shops, theaters, sometimes university etc.

    • @bobbiusshadow6985
      @bobbiusshadow6985 4 года назад +2

      @@RealConstructor That's interesting, I like it, thx for your input

    • @lc4lyf
      @lc4lyf 4 года назад +2

      fun fact, charlottetown isn’t actually big enough to be considered a city! like, area wise. and i’m from charlottetown so i think i know :)
      also yes, r/iamverysmart lol

  • @reillywalker195
    @reillywalker195 5 лет назад +5

    The territories do have their own governments. The main difference is that territorial governments get their powers from the federal government, whereas the provinces get their powers from the Constitution.

  • @rv_354
    @rv_354 5 лет назад +9

    Can you do a video on the states of germany and their history?

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 8 месяцев назад +1

    The territories do, in fact, have their own governments. The difference is the federal parliament can change the powers of territorial governments, their boundaries, etc. through legislation. To change provincial powers requires constitutional ammendment. Provinces also have extra powers, such as control over their natural resources.

  • @jarjarbinx79
    @jarjarbinx79 4 года назад +21

    The mounties (Canadian police) are headquartered currently and historically in Regina Saskatchewan

  • @Aprill264
    @Aprill264 5 лет назад +78

    I was waiting till you’d do canada, next you should do the UK, Germany or the Netherlands

    • @KanyeTheGayFish69
      @KanyeTheGayFish69 5 лет назад

      Fiery Gaming those counties aren’t big enough

    • @KanyeTheGayFish69
      @KanyeTheGayFish69 5 лет назад

      Fiery Gaming the provinces and states in this series are many times the size of those whole countries

    • @RGI-gy5uc
      @RGI-gy5uc 5 лет назад

      U.K. counties are SMALL

    • @RGI-gy5uc
      @RGI-gy5uc 5 лет назад

      Fiery Gaming he could do boroughs of London

    • @Aprill264
      @Aprill264 5 лет назад

      Ricky I i mean the countries of the UK: Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland

  • @nylesandrews
    @nylesandrews 5 лет назад +5

    ("Montreal" Canadian).With still a Background thanks to my mom ("German") Speaking as well.1.English-2.German-3.French.

    • @Hugo-cn9no
      @Hugo-cn9no 4 года назад +1

      Montréal * éééééééééé

  • @aliaguerin1266
    @aliaguerin1266 5 лет назад

    Did you do the Netherlands or did i missed it. And thank you for al youre vids love them.

  • @cdkx655
    @cdkx655 4 года назад

    It would've been nice to show where each province actually was while talking about them. Some did, some didn't, some had really zoomed in maps that lacked context. I think the one with the map of Canada with one province highlighted is the best way to go. Can't speak for everyone, but a lot of what I get out of the channel is understanding how places fit together.

  • @farukecirli1910
    @farukecirli1910 5 лет назад +10

    I think u should make a compilation of intersting things in every 10 episode.(pls ignore grammar mistakes)

  • @harrybishop2150
    @harrybishop2150 5 лет назад +3

    Please do the states and territories of Australia for a Filler Week video.

  • @horsepro123
    @horsepro123 2 года назад +5

    As an Albertan, whose parents are farmers, I will admit, we love our rodeos out here. Saying that we’re the “Texas of Canada” is definitely not wrong.

  • @harleancarpenter8043
    @harleancarpenter8043 4 года назад

    Great video, guys

  • @stefanobollani4503
    @stefanobollani4503 5 лет назад +12

    Italy next please

    • @rebeccabonnicirebygotitall
      @rebeccabonnicirebygotitall 5 лет назад

      Yes! Would love to know more about them, especially Sicily and Sardegna. Ciao da Malta 🇮🇹🇲🇹

  • @shogunPg98
    @shogunPg98 5 лет назад +6

    Could you do the regions of Italy? Beacause the are so diverse

  • @bellataylor25
    @bellataylor25 4 года назад

    I love you guys I love learning countries . Can you make state videos pls

  • @ratif8298
    @ratif8298 5 лет назад +1

    I live in Calgary! I am always moving around in Canada never left,but I plan to! I am from the east coast

  • @jackleventreur3
    @jackleventreur3 5 лет назад +83

    Love you canada❤️❤️❤️ from France 🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦

    • @dylanphair.
      @dylanphair. 4 года назад +1

      so you called canada CA CA CA CA CA. JK

    • @sampellicelli9789
      @sampellicelli9789 4 года назад +4

      Merci du Québec

    • @tausifkarim8861
      @tausifkarim8861 4 года назад +4

      Meh,french is overrated.Thank God I can work in the IT industry in Montreal without knowing a shred of it.

    • @ok-he2ko
      @ok-he2ko 4 года назад +2

      @@tausifkarim8861 Agree as a german

    • @PrincessLockette
      @PrincessLockette 4 года назад +1

      Merci 😘😗

  • @MrPersepolice
    @MrPersepolice 5 лет назад +73

    Your Québécois accent is kind of great, curious how much time you spent in Montreal ? (I'm assuming..)

    • @Hugo-cn9no
      @Hugo-cn9no 4 года назад +15

      Montréal* ééééééééé

    • @liamvarin6209
      @liamvarin6209 4 года назад +2

      He's been to Montreal for a geograbee

    • @ZakhadWOW
      @ZakhadWOW 3 года назад +2

      the real challenge is learning how to swear properly in Quebecois (and not Montrealais, which has been bastardized LOL)

  • @liamfinnegan7496
    @liamfinnegan7496 5 лет назад +2

    Hey, I never type anything on youtube videos, but just wanted to say, Canadian territories have their own governments and their own legislatures! The main difference is our territorial government budget is mainly funded through transfers from the Feds. I come from the Yukon, so just wanted to clarify!

  • @Coast-to-Coast
    @Coast-to-Coast 3 года назад +2

    Okay some Acadians may have migrated to Louisiana, but lots and lots were deported there by the British who were uncomfortable with such a big French population that was not loyal to Britain in their territory. Lots died on the trip, and families were split up. It's a grim history that shouldn't be overlooked (although lots of Western and Central Canadians do not know about this event. My Social Studies teacher from ON thought that *all* the Acadians in the east coast were deported or died during the Deportation. He was shocked to learn that I am half Acadian.)
    (As a person originally from NB, the "town" part of Charlottetown is pronounced normally as the word "town" not "ton." As a person who moved to northern BC ten years ago, up here we are not so much hippies like the lower mainland stereotype. Here it's basically like Alberta with a different flag; Conservatives, Cowboys, and oil workers. And no, contrary to popular belief, it doesn't rain all the time up here (people I know back East always ask if it's rainy here because it is in southern BC, but nope.))