|
|
 |
 |
|
Flag |
Coat of arms |
|
|
Anthem: "O Canada"
Royal anthem: "God Save
the Queen"
|
|
|
|
Capital |
Ottawa
45°24′N
75°40′W
/ 45.4,
-75.667 |
|
Largest
city |
Toronto |
|
Official
languages |
English,
French |
|
Recognised
regional languages |
Inuktitut,
Inuinnaqtun,
Cree,
Dėne
Sųłiné,
Gwichin,
Inuvialuktun,
Slavey,
Tłįchǫ
Yatiģ |
|
Ethnic
groups |
28%
British,
23%
French,
3.5%
Aboriginal
peoples,
47%
other |
|
Demonym |
Canadian |
|
Government |
Parliamentary
democracy
and
Constitutional
monarchy |
|
- |
Monarch |
HM Queen
Elizabeth
II |
|
- |
Governor
General |
Michaėlle
Jean |
|
- |
Prime
Minister |
Stephen
Harper |
|
Establishment |
|
- |
British
North
America
Act |
July 1,
1867 |
|
- |
Statute
of
Westminster |
December
11,
1931 |
|
- |
Canada
Act |
April 17,
1982 |
|
Area |
|
- |
Total |
9,984,670 km² (2nd)
3,854,085 sq mi |
|
- |
Water (%) |
8.92
(891,163
km²/344,080
mi²) |
|
|
Population |
|
- |
2008 estimate |
33,332,000[1] (36th) |
|
- |
2006 census |
31,612,897 |
|
- |
Density |
3.2/km² (219th)
8.3/sq mi |
|
GDP (PPP) |
2007 estimate |
|
- |
Total |
$1.274
trillion[2] (13th) |
|
- |
Per
capita |
$38,200[2] (21st) |
|
GDP
(nominal) |
2007 estimate |
|
- |
Total |
$1.432
trillion
[3] (9th) |
|
- |
Per
capita |
$42,738 (14th) |
|
Gini |
32.1
(2005)[2] |
|
HDI (2007) |
▲
0.961 (high) (4th) |
|
Currency |
Canadian
dollar
($) (CAD) |
|
Time
zone |
(UTC−3.5
to −8) |
|
- |
Summer (DST) |
(UTC−2.5
to −7) |
|
Internet
TLD |
.ca |
|
Calling
code |
+1 |
|
Canada
portal |
|
Canada
(IPA: /ˈkęnədə/)
is a country
occupying most
of northern
North America,
extending from
the Atlantic
Ocean in the
east to the
Pacific Ocean in
the west and
northward into
the Arctic
Ocean. It is the
world's second
largest country
by total
area,[2] and
shares land
borders with the
United States to
the south and
northwest.
The land
occupied by
Canada was
inhabited for
millennia by
various
aboriginal
people.
Beginning in the
late 15th
century, British
and French
expeditions
explored and
later settled
the Atlantic
coast. France
ceded nearly all
of its colonies
in North America
in 1763 after
the Seven Years
War. In 1867,
with the union
of three British
North American
colonies through
Confederation,
Canada was
formed as a
federal dominion
of four
provinces.[4][5][6]
This began an
accretion of
additional
provinces and
territories and
a process of
increasing
autonomy from
the United
Kingdom,
highlighted by
the Statute of
Westminster in
1931, and
culminating in
the Canada Act
in 1982 which
severed the
vestiges of
legal dependence
on the British
parliament.
A federation now
comprising ten provinces and
three territories, Canada is
a parliamentary democracy
and a constitutional
monarchy, with Queen
Elizabeth II as its head of
state. It is a bilingual and
multicultural country, with
both English and French as
official languages at the
federal level.
Technologically advanced and
industrialized, Canada
maintains a diversified
economy that is heavily
reliant upon its abundant
natural resources and upon
tradeparticularly with the
United States, with which
Canada has had a long and
complex relationship
Famous for the production and
export of tea, coffee, coconuts
and rubber, Sri Lanka boasts a
progressive and modern
industrial economy and the
highest per capita income in
South Asia. The natural beauty
of Sri Lanka's tropical forests,
beaches and landscape, as well
as its rich cultural heritage,
make it a world famous tourist
destination.
After over two thousand years of
rule by local kingdoms, parts of
Sri Lanka were colonized by
Portugal and the Netherlands
beginning in the 16th century,
before the control of the entire
country was ceded to the British
Empire in 1815. During World War
II, Sri Lanka served as an
important base for Allied forces
in the fight against the
Japanese Empire.[4] A
nationalist political movement
arose in the country in the
early 20th century with the aim
of obtaining political
independence, which was
eventually granted by the
British after peaceful
negotiations in 1948.