
The map is from 2016, but here’s the breakdown of the percentage of people who can speaker English, French or who can speak both (Bilingual Speakers) by province in 2021:
Making Sense Of The World, One Map At A Time
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The map is from 2016, but here’s the breakdown of the percentage of people who can speaker English, French or who can speak both (Bilingual Speakers) by province in 2021:
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Here’s a table of some of most notable ones:
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Here’s more about the project.
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The map above shows some of the minority language sin France in terms of where they are spoken, how many speakers there are and what percentage of the people living in that region are able to speak the language.
However, the map is now somewhat out of data here are the latest figures as of 2022 from Ethnologue.
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All of these stunning elevation maps of the world’s continents (except Australia and Antarctica) are the brain child of cstats1 who you can follow on X/Twitter here and Instagram here.
And if you’d like to support them you buy something from their Amazon shop here.
The first map above is an elevation map of Europe. Here are the highest and lowest points in Europe:
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The North of Ireland (aka The North of The Republic of Ireland) extends further North than any part of Northern Ireland (one of the 4 countries of the UK).
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The map above shows the flags in use of each country back in 1988. The most notable differences from today are the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia still being unified countries and East and West Germany still being divided.
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