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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell Concert Tickets at PNC Music Pavilion - Charlotte in Charlotte in Charlottesville, Virginia For Sale

Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell Concert Tickets at PNC Music Pavilion - Charlotte in Charlotte
Type: Tickets & Traveling, For Sale - Private.

Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell Tickets at PNC Music Pavilion - Charlotte
Charlotte, NC
May 29, xxxx
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Xcel Energy Center
Saint Paul, MN
Sunday
3/2/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Fedex Forum
Memphis, TN
Friday
3/7/xxxx
7:30 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
CenturyLink Center - LA
Bossier City, LA
Saturday
3/8/xxxx
7:30 PM
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Sleep Train Amphitheatre - Chula Vista (formerly Cricket Wireless Amphitheatre)
Chula Vista, CA
Friday
3/21/xxxx
TBD
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First Midwest Bank Amphitheatre (formerly Tweeter Center-il)
Tinley Park, IL
Tuesday
4/1/xxxx
TBD
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Aarons Amphitheatre At Lakewood (formerly Lakewood Amphitheatre)
Atlanta, GA
Thursday
4/10/xxxx
TBD
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Walnut Creek Amphitheatre (formerly TWC Music Pavilion)
Raleigh, NC
Thursday
4/24/xxxx
TBD
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PNC Music Pavilion - Charlotte (Formerly Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre)
Charlotte, NC
Friday
4/25/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Rogers Arena
Vancouver, Canada
Saturday
5/3/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Prospera Place
Kelowna, Canada
Sunday
5/4/xxxx
7:30 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Encana Event Centre
Dawson Creek, Canada
Tuesday
5/6/xxxx
7:30 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Encana Event Centre
Dawson Creek, Canada
Wednesday
5/7/xxxx
7:30 PM
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Country Megaticket
Sleep Train Amphitheatre
Wheatland, CA
Thursday
5/8/xxxx
TBD
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Shoreline Amphitheatre - CA
Mountain View, CA
Thursday
5/8/xxxx
TBD
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Gexa Energy Pavilion (Formerly Superpages.com Center)
Dallas, TX
Thursday
5/8/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Scotiabank Saddledome (Formerly Pengrowth Saddledome)
Calgary, Canada
Friday
5/9/xxxx
7:30 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Rexall Place
Edmonton, Canada
Saturday
5/10/xxxx
7:30 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Rexall Place
Edmonton, Canada
Monday
5/12/xxxx
7:30 PM
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Country Megaticket
Farm Bureau Live at Virginia Beach (Formerly Virginia Beach Amphitheatre)
Virginia Beach, VA
Thursday
5/15/xxxx
TBD
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MidFlorida Credit Union Amphitheatre At The Florida State Fairgrounds (formerly Live Nation Amphitheatre)
Tampa, FL
Friday
5/16/xxxx
TBD
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Country Megaticket
Klipsch Music Center (Formerly Verizon Wireless Music Center - IN)
Noblesville, IN
Friday
5/16/xxxx
TBD
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Country Megaticket
Jiffy Lube Live (Formerly Nissan Pavilion)
Bristow, VA
Friday
5/16/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
PNC Music Pavilion - Charlotte (Formerly Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre)
Charlotte, NC
Thursday
5/29/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Jiffy Lube Live (Formerly Nissan Pavilion)
Bristow, VA
Friday
5/30/xxxx
TBD
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Country Megaticket
Xfinity Theatre (formerly Comcast Theatre)
Hartford, CT
Friday
5/30/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Jiffy Lube Live (Formerly Nissan Pavilion)
Bristow, VA
Saturday
5/31/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
PNC Bank Arts Center
Holmdel, NJ
Sunday
6/1/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Farm Bureau Live at Virginia Beach (Formerly Virginia Beach Amphitheatre)
Virginia Beach, VA
Friday
6/6/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Walnut Creek Amphitheatre (formerly TWC Music Pavilion)
Raleigh, NC
Saturday
6/7/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Walnut Creek Amphitheatre (formerly TWC Music Pavilion)
Raleigh, NC
Sunday
6/8/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Verizon Wireless Amphitheater - MO
Maryland Heights, MO
Thursday
6/12/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Verizon Wireless Amphitheater - MO
Maryland Heights, MO
Friday
6/13/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
DTE Energy Music Theatre
Clarkston, MI
Thursday
6/19/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Heinz Field
Pittsburgh, PA
Saturday
6/21/xxxx
TBD
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Country Megaticket
Cruzan Amphitheatre (formerly Sound Advice Amphitheatre)
West Palm Beach, FL
Thursday
7/10/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Oak Mountain Amphitheatre - AL
Birmingham, AL
Thursday
7/24/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Aarons Amphitheatre At Lakewood (formerly Lakewood Amphitheatre)
Atlanta, GA
Friday
7/25/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Aarons Amphitheatre At Lakewood (formerly Lakewood Amphitheatre)
Atlanta, GA
Saturday
7/26/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Gillette Stadium
Foxborough, MA
Sunday
8/10/xxxx
6:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Lincoln Financial Field
Philadelphia, PA
Friday
8/15/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Darien Lake Performing Arts Center
Darien Center, NY
Saturday
8/16/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Saratoga Performing Arts Center
Saratoga Springs, NY
Sunday
8/17/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Blossom Music Center
Cuyahoga Falls, OH
Thursday
8/21/xxxx
8:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Blossom Music Center
Cuyahoga Falls, OH
Friday
8/22/xxxx
8:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Riverbend Music Center
Cincinnati, OH
Saturday
8/23/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Riverbend Music Center
Cincinnati, OH
Sunday
8/24/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Klipsch Music Center (Formerly Verizon Wireless Music Center - IN)
Noblesville, IN
Friday
8/29/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Klipsch Music Center (Formerly Verizon Wireless Music Center - IN)
Noblesville, IN
Saturday
8/30/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Soldier Field Stadium
Chicago, IL
Sunday
8/31/xxxx
6:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Verizon Wireless Arena - NH
Manchester, NH
Thursday
9/11/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Madison Square Garden
New York, NY
Friday
9/12/xxxx
7:30 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Xfinity Theatre (formerly Comcast Theatre)
Hartford, CT
Saturday
9/13/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
AT&T Center
San Antonio, TX
Thursday
9/18/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
Spring, TX
Friday
9/19/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Gexa Energy Pavilion (Formerly Superpages.com Center)
Dallas, TX
Saturday
9/20/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
MidFlorida Credit Union Amphitheatre At The Florida State Fairgrounds (formerly Live Nation Amphitheatre)
Tampa, FL
Friday
9/26/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Cruzan Amphitheatre (formerly Sound Advice Amphitheatre)
West Palm Beach, FL
Saturday
9/27/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Sleep Train Amphitheatre
Wheatland, CA
Thursday
10/16/xxxx
TBD
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Concord Pavilion (formerly Sleep Train Pavilion)
Concord, CA
Friday
10/17/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Shoreline Amphitheatre - CA
Mountain View, CA
Saturday
10/18/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Ak-Chin Pavilion (Formerly Desert Sky Pavilion)
Phoenix, AZ
Thursday
10/23/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Sleep Train Amphitheatre - Chula Vista (formerly Cricket Wireless Amphitheatre)
Chula Vista, CA
Friday
10/24/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Luke Bryan, Lee Brice & Cole Swindell
Hollywood Bowl
Los Angeles, CA
Saturday
10/25/xxxx
TBD
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EINVLKFJDLKFJUpper Canada was a primary destination for English, Scottish and Scots-Irish settlers to Canada in the nineteenth century, and was on the front lines in the War of xxxx between the British Empire and the United States. The province also received immigrants from non English-speaking sources such as Germans, many of whom settled around Kitchener (formerly called Berlin).[11] Ontario would become the most populous province in the Dominion of Canada at the time of Confederation, and, together with Montreal, formed the country's industrial heartland and emerged as an important cultural and media centre for English Canada. Toronto is today the largest city in Canada, and, largely as a result of changing immigration patterns since the xxxxs, is also one of the most multi-cultural citiesAfter the fall of New France to the British in xxxx, a colonial governing class established itself in Quebec City. Larger numbers of English-speaking settlers arrived in the Eastern Townships and Montreal after the American Revolution. English, Scottish, and Irish communities established themselves in Montreal in the xxxxs. Montreal would become Canada's largest city and commercial hub in Canada. An Anglo-Scot business elite would control Canadian commerce up until the xxxxs, founding a Protestant public school system and hospitals and universities such as McGill University. These immigrants were joined by other Europeans in the early xxxxs, including Italians and Jews, who assimilated to a large degree into the anglophone community. Many English-speaking Quebeckers left Quebec following the election of the Parti Québécois in xxxx resulting[12] in a steep decline in the anglophone population; many who have remained have learned French in order to function within the dominant FrancoAs in much of western Canada, many of the earliest European communities in British Columbia began as outposts of the Hudson's Bay Company, founded in London in xxxx to carry on the fur trade via Hudson Bay. Broader settlement began in earnest with the founding of Fort Victoria in xxxx and the subsequent creation of the Colony of Vancouver Island in xxxx. The capital, Victoria developed during the height of the British Empire and long self-identified as being "more EnglThe Colony of British Columbia was established on the mainland in xxxx by Governor James Douglas as a means of asserting British sovereignty in the face of a massive influx of gold miners, many of whom were American. Despite the enormous distances that separated the Pacific colony from Central Canada, British Columbia joined Confederation in xxxx, choosing to become Canadian partly as a means of resisting possible absorption into the United States. Chinese workers, brought in to labour on the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway, established sizeable populations in many B.C. communities, particularly Vancouver which quickly became the province's economic and cultural centre after the railway's completion in xxxx. Like Ontario, British Columbia has received immigrants from a broad range of countries including large numbers of Germans, Scandinavians, Italians, Sikhs from India and Chinese from Hong Kong, Taiwan and in more recent years, the People's Republic, and the ongoing influx of Europeans from Europe continues. However for many years British Columbia, in contrast to the Prairie Provinces, received a majority of immigrants from Great Britain: over half in xxxx and over 60 percent by xxxx.[13] Over half of people with British ancestry in British Columbia have direct family ties within two generations (i.e. grandparent or parent) to the British Isles, rather than via British ethnic stock from Central Canada or the Maritimes (unlike the Prairies where Canadian-British stock is more common). Europeans of non-British stock have been more common, also, in British Columbia than in any other part of Canada, although certain ethnicities such as Ukrainians and Scandinavians are more concentrated in the Prairies. Except for the Italians and more recent European immigrants, earlier waves of Europeans of all origins are near-entirely assimilated, although any number of accents are common in families and communities nearly anywhere in the province, as The French-English tensions that marked the establishment of the earliest English-speaking settlements in Nova Scotia were echoed on the Prairies in the late nineteenth century. The earliest British settlement in Assiniboia (part of present-day Manitoba) involved some 300 largely Scottish colonists under the sponsorship of Lord Selkirk in xxxx. The early attempts at introducing English-speaking settlers into an area already occupied by French-speaking Métis sparked the Red River Rebellion and the later Northwest Rebellion.[citation needed] These conflicts created a rift between Ontario, (English-speaking and at the time largely Protestant), and Quebec. The suppression of the rebellions allowed the government of Canada to proceed with a settlement of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta that was to create provinces that identified generally with English Canada in culture and outlook, although immigration included large numbers of people from non English-speaking European backgrounds, especially Although Canada has long prided itself on its relatively peaceful history, war has played a significant role in the formation of an English Canadian identity. As part of the British Empire, Canada found itself at war against the Central Powers in xxxx. In the main, English Canadians enlisted for service with an initial enthusiastic and genuine sense of loyalty and duty.[14] The sacrifices and accomplishments of Canadians at battles such as Vimy Ridge and the Dieppe Raid in France are well known and respected among English Canadians and helped forge a more common sense of nationality.[15] In World War II, Canada made its own separate declaration of war and played a critical role in supporting the Allied war effort. Again, support for the war effort to defend the United Kingdom and liberate continental Europe from Axis domination was particularly strong among English Canadians[citation needed]. In the post war era, although Canada was committed to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, English Canadians took considerable pride in the Nobel Prize for Peace awarded to Lester Pearson for his role in resolving the Suez Crisis and have been determined supporters of the peacekeeping activities oIn the late twentieth century, increasing American cultural influence combined with diminishing British influence, and political and constitutional crises driven by the exigencies of dealing with the Quebec sovereignty movement and Western alienation contributed to something of an identity crisis for English Canadians.[18] George Grant's Lament for a Nation is still seen as an important work relating to the stresses and vulnerabilities affecting English Canada.[19] However, the period of the xxxxs through to the present have also seen tremendous accomplishments in English Canadian literature. Writers from English-speaking Canada such as Margaret Atwood, Mordecai Richler, Margaret Laurence, Robertson Davies, Timothy Findley, and Carol Shields dissected the experience of English Canadians [20][21] (or of life in English Canadian society.[22] and assumed a place among the world's best-known English-language literary figures. Journalist Pierre Berton wrote a number of books popularizing Canadian history which had a particular resonance among English-speaking Canadians, while critics and philosophers such as Northrop Frye and John Ralston Saul have attempted to analyze the Canadian experience. Still, particularly at the academic level, debate continues as to the nature of English Canada and the extent to which English Canadians exist asEnglish-speaking Canadians have not adopted symbols specific to themselves. Although English Canadians are attached to the Canadian Flag,[24] it is the national flag and intended to be a symbol for all Canadians, regardless of ethnicity or language. The flag debate of xxxx revealed a strong attachment to the Canadian Red Ensign,[25] previously flown as the flag of Canada prior to the adoption of the maple leaf in xxxx. Even today, there is considerable support for use of the Red Ensign in certain specific circumstances, such as the commemoration ceremonies for the BattThe maple leaf itself, as a symbol, was used as early as xxxx in what is now Quebec as a symbol of the Société St. Jean Baptiste but was adopted for use shortly afterwards by the English-speaking community in Canada. The Maple Leaf Forever, penned in xxxx at the time of Confederation was at one time regarded as an informal anthem for English Canadians,[27] but reaction by English-speaking Canadians to a decision of a New Brunswick school to stop the singing of the anthem are attached to the official national anthem, O Canada, by Calixa Lavallée suggests that the official anthem enjoys considerable suThe beaver is sometimes seen as another Canadian symbol, but is not necessarily specific to English Canadians. It too was used originally in connection with the Société St. Jean Baptiste before coming into currency as a more general Canadian symbol. In the xxxx political The data in the following tables pertain to the population of Canada reporting English as its sole mother tongue, a total of 17,352,315 inhabitants out of 29,639,035. A figure for single ethnic origin responses is provide, as well as a total figure for ethnic origins appearing in single or multiple responses (for groups exceeding 2% of the total English-speaking population). The sum of the percentages for single responses is less than 100%, while the corresponding total for single or multiple responses is greater than 100%. The data are taken from the xxxx CensuDepending on the principal period of immigration to Canada and other factors, ethnic groups (other than British Isles, French, and Aboriginal ones) vary in their percentage of native speakers of English. For example, while a roughly equal number of Canadians have at least partial Ukrainian and Chinese ancestry, 82% of Ukrainian Canadians speak English as their sole mother tongue, and only 17% of Chinese Canadians do (though this rises to 34% in the 0 to 14 age group).[34] As the number of second and third-generation Chinese Canadians increases, their weight within the English-speaking population can also be expected to increase. It should also be borne in mind that some percentage of any minority ethnic group will adopt French,Except in Newfoundland and the Maritime provinces, most Canadian English is only subtly different from English spoken in much of the mid-western and western United States. Spoken English in the Maritimes has some resemblance to English of some of the New England states. Newfoundland has the most distinct accent, with the spoken language influenced in particular by Irish immigration. There are a few pronunciations that are distinctive for most English Canadians, such as 'zed' for the last letter oEnglish Canadian spelling continues to favour most spellings of British English, including 'centre', 'theatre', 'colour' and 'labour', although usage is not universal. Other spellings, such as 'gaol' and 'programme', have disappeared entirely or are in retreat. The principal differences between British and Canadian spelling are twofold: '-ise' and '-yse' words ('organise/organize' and 'analyse' in Britain, 'organize' and 'analyze/analyse' in Canada), and '-e' words ('annexe' and 'grille' in Britain, 'annex' and 'grill' in Canada, but 'axe' in both, 'ax' in the USA). But '-ize' is becoming increasingly common in Britain, bringing British spelling closer to the Vocabulary of Canadian English contains a few distinctive words and phrases. In British Columbia, for example, the Chinook word 'skookum' for, variously, 'good' or 'great' or 'reliable' or 'durable', has passed into common use, and the French word 'tuque' for a particular type of winter head covering is in quite widespread use througLanguages besides English are spoken extensively in provinces with English-speaking majorities. Besides French (which is an official language of the province of New Brunswick and in the three territories), indigenous languages, including Inuktitut and Cree are widely spoken and are in some instances influencing the language of English speakers, just as traditional First Nations art forms are influencing public art, architecture and symbology in English Canada. Immigrants to Canada from Asia and parts of Europe in particular have brought languages other than English and French to many communities, particularly Toronto, Vancouver and other larger centres. On the west coast, for example, Chinese and Punjabi are taught in some high schools; while on the east coast efforts have been made to preserve the Scots Gaelic language brought by early settlers to Nova Scotia. In the Prairie provinces, and to a lesser degree elsewhere, there are a large number of second-generation and more Ukrainian Canadians who have retained at least partial fluency in The population of the provinces other than Quebec in the xxxx Census is some 22,514,455. It is impossible to know with certainty how many of that number would self-identify as 'English Canadians' under the broadest interpretation of the term. Persons self-identifying with 'English' as their primary ethnic origin as part of the xxxx census - Quebec included - totaled slightly less than 6,000,000 persons. However, many Canadians who identify other ethnic origins for the purpose of the census might identify as 'English Canadian' in the broader sense of 'English-speaking Canadians' and possibly share some cultural affinities with the group identifying itself as 'English Canadian' in the more In sum, while the single largest religious affiliation of 'English Canadians' - in the Rest of Canada sense of the term - may for convenience be slotted under the different Christian religions called Protestantism, it still represents a minority of the population at less than 37%. So-called 'English Canadians' include a large segment who do not identify as Christian. Even with a clear majority of almost 73%, English Canadian Christians represent a large diversity of beliefs that makes it exceedingly difficult to accurately portray religion as a defining characteristic.limited sense.the Ukrainian language.hout the country.Canadian standard.f the alphabet. particularly in Quebec.s of Canada.[33]satire by Stanley Burke, Frog Fables & Beaver Tales, a spoof on Canadian politics of the Pierre Trudeau era, English Canadians are depicted in the main as well-meaning, but not terribly clever beavers (with other animals such as frogs, sea otters and gophers assigned to represent other linguistic and provincial populations). The historical relevance of the beaver stems from the early fur trade. It has been asserted that "[t]he fur trade in general and the Hudson's Bay Company in particular exercised a profound influence on the sculpting of the CanaThe Crown has historically been an intangible but significant symbol for many English Canadians. Loyalty to Great Britain created the initial fracture lines between the populations of the Thirteen Colonies and the populations of Nova Scotia and Quebec at the time of the American Revolution and forced the flight of the Loyalists after the end of the war. As such English Canada developed in the nineteenth century along lines that continued to emphasize this historical attachment, evident in the naming of cities, parks and even whole provinces after members of the royal family, the retention of flags, badges and provincial mottos expressive of loyalty, and enthusiastic responses to royal visits. While such loyalty is no longer as powerful a unifying force as it once was among English Canadians, it continues to exert a noticeable influence on English Canadian culture. According to the author and political commentator Richard Gwyn while "[t]he British connection has long vanished... it takes only a short dig down to the sedimentary layer once occupied by the Loyalists to locaIn the early years of the twentieth century painters in both central Canada and the west coast began applying post-impressionist style to Canadian landscape paintings. Painters such as Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven, which included painters such as A.Y. Jackson, captured images of the wilderness in ways that forced English Canadians to discard their conservative and traditional views of art. In British Columbia, Emily Carr, born in Victoria in xxxx, spent much of her life painting. Her early paintings of northwest coast aboriginal villages were critical to creating awareness and appreciation of First Nations cultures among English Canadians. The Arctic paintings of Lawren Harris, another member of the Group of Seven, are also highly iconic for English Canadians.te the sources of a great many contemporary Canadian convictions and conventions."[30] Gwyn considers that the modern equivalent of the once talismanic loyalty is "tolerance": "a quality now accepted almost universally as the feature that makes us a distinct people."[31]dian soul."[29]pport.[28]le of Vimy Ridge.[26] an identifiable identity.[23]f the United Nations.[16][17]Scandinavians and Ukrainians.has also been the case since colish than the English".phone society. in the world.