Quebec report finds positive signs for French but ‘bonjour/hi’ still a concern
QUEBEC — A new report from Quebec’s language watchdog notes encouraging signs for the health of French in the province but raises an alarm about increased use of the bilingual “bonjour/hi” greeting in Montreal shops.
In 2017, Quebec legislators were so concerned about creeping bilingualism they unanimously adopted a motion calling on store clerks to stick with a simple “bonjour” when welcoming customers. The report published Friday offers little comfort on that front.
The Office quebecois de la langue francaise found that between 2010 and 2017, use of “bonjour/hi” in Montreal doubled, representing 8 per cent of all greetings in 2017. Exclusively English greetings also increased, occurring 17 per cent of the time in 2017, up from 12 per cent in 2010.
French greetings remained the norm, but they were down to 75 per cent from 84 per cent over the same period.