Dominion of Canada
Appearance
English
[edit]Proper noun
[edit]- (dated, formal) Canada
- 1954 February, Trevor Holloway, “Canada's Transcontinental Routes”, in Railway Magazine, pages 127-128:
- In that year [1871] British Columbia decided to become part of the Dominion of Canada, on condition that a transcontinental railway should be completed without delay.
- 2001, Alan Rayburn, “Looking at Canada's Places from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and to the Arctic”, in Naming Canada: Stories about Canadian Place Names (nonfiction), University of Toronto Press, →ISBN, How Canada Lost Its 'Dominion', pages 17–18:
- About that time, I was asked by the United Nations to confirm the official long and short names of our country. I assumed the long title was Dominion of Canada, and the short was simply Canada. I was wrong. External Affairs declared that Canada alone was official as both the long and the short name. […] Historians trace the origin of the title Dominion of Canada in the constitution to Sir Samuel Leonard Tilley, one of the Fathers of Confederation, from New Brunswick.
- (history) Canada from 1867 to the early Cold War.
Usage notes
[edit]Translations
[edit]former official name of Canada
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Further reading
[edit]- Name of Canada on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Dominion of Canada (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia