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It includes the total number of people with each surname as well as the rate per 100,000 people. Figures for the 2000 Census are also included for comparison. [10] In 2010, there were 51,089,493 people with last names in the top 100, representing 16.5% of the total (308,745,538).
For others, a name in their ancestral language is rendered in English or French spelling such as Tootoosis (Plains Cree), Newashish (Atikamekw), or Yahgulanaas (Haida). Some people have a legal or baptismal name in English or French and separate name in their ancestral language, for example Oronhyatekha (Mohawk), who was also called Peter Martin.
Clara Dennis (1881–1958), images of early 20th century Nova Scotia and Mi'kmaq people; Susan Dobson (born 1965), photographer, focuses on themes of urban landscape and suburban culture; Julie Doiron (born 1972) Marie-Alice Dumont (1892–1985), portrait and landscape photography; Carol Dunlop (1946–1982), writer, translator, activist and ...
Nomi Kaplan (born 1933), Lithuanian-Canadian photographer; Zahra Kazemi (1948–2003), photographer; Gertrude Kearns (born 1950), war artist; Shelagh Keeley (born 1954) [2] Siassie Kenneally (1969–2018) Marsha Kennedy (born 1951) Janice Kerbel (born 1969) Estelle Muriel Kerr (1879–1971) Katja MacLeod Kessin (1959–2006), painter; Najat El ...
Canadian female models by province or territory (4 C) A. Canadian female adult models (7 P) Pages in category "Canadian female models" The following 52 pages are in ...
Media in category "Images of Canadian people" The following 8 files are in this category, out of 8 total. J. File:Jean Paul Lemieux - LAC PA-211607.jpg;
The origins of some of Kahnawake's European family names were first published by Father Forbes in 1899. [2] Below is detailed history of Kahnawake's most common surnames of European / North American origin. Beauvais: the first Beauvais was André Karhaton, who married Marie-Anne Kahenratas before 1743. He was a young man from the Beauvais ...
Project Surname was a project enacted by the Northwest Territories Council and Government of Canada to assign surnames to Inuit. [1] Project Surname was also known as Operation Surname . [ 2 ] These assigned surnames eventually replaced the disc number system, where numbers were assigned and kept on discs that people were obligated to wear from ...