On the naming of Canada

It’s in the Union Act 1800, passed by the British Parliament, article 1:

That it be the First Article of the Union of the kingdoms of Great Britain and Ireland, that the said kingdoms of Great Britain and Ireland shall, upon the first day of January which shall be in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and one, and for ever after, be united into one kingdom, by the name of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland

There was a parallel act of union passed by the Irish Parliament.

The two parliaments were succeeded by the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

There was apparently a regulation passed after the Anglo-Irish Treaty which said that the references in the Union Act to « Ireland » do not include the Irish republic.

@UDS1 probably knows more about that.

The name of the UK Parliament was altered in 1927 to be the « Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. ». The same act authorized His Majesty to make a similar alteration to his Royal Titles.

As with all supermarkets, the major determiner of quality was location. I can well imagine a supermarket right in the downtown core being old and decrepit, but Dominion as a chain was perfectly fine, and so is Metro.

Trust me, you don’t want to be a Dominion.

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As with all supermarkets, the major determiner of quality was location. I can well imagine a supermarket right in the downtown core being old and decrepit, but Dominion as a chain was perfectly fine, and so is Metro.
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Hear, hear. I have warm memories of Dominion, not the fanciest place, but certainly nothing decrepit about it. A perfectly good everyday food store. I could name other chains in the Toronto area that are / were of visibly lower quality, but won’t be mentioning any names.

Dominion’s had “The Baker’s Oven”, which was decent, and I have nothing against the chain. As a student in Montréal, I often shopped at Métro and liked it. When it moved to English Canada, it became more average, and did not have the things I liked about it Montreal: ten types of homemade sausage including lamb merguez, and several other quality Québécois products - from patisserie, spruce beer, pettes des soeurs and much else.

But the specific Dominion’s near U of T campus was a filthy, pricey, badly lit grocery store not at all similar to other stores.

The naming of Canada is a serious matter
It isn’t just one of your holiday games
You may think at first I’m as mad as a hatter
when I tell you Canada must have three different names.

As a U of T alumnus, I can agree that the Dominion near the campus was not the best in the world.

In 2002, I had a summer job in Sainte-Foy, a neighborhood of Quebec City. I would have lunch at the local mall, Place Sainte-Foy. I found it remarkable that the food court was poorer than at a typical Toronto mall. OTOH, there was this supermarket there, and it was gigantic. And one of the three best-stocked supermarkets I had seen in my life. In fact, perhaps the best-stocked.

I came away from my 3-month stay in Quebec City with the impression that the locals like to cook at home rather than to eat out on a regular basis.

Times may have changed, but even the dingier-than-average student grocery store we went to in Montreal had many gourmet and quality store made items you just don’t often see in Ontario stores (until Farm Boy opened up, anyway). I know many Quebeckers who shopped for fresh ingredients several times a week, and rarely bought any frozen food, especially commercially prepared stuff to reheat.

In my limited experience, Quebeckers also socially enjoy cooking a nice meal together as a group. Most know a lot about food and how to cook traditional dishes. I have made a social meal together, each doing a different dish, before in Ontario, of course, but not nearly as often. Usually you arrive at the potluck with the dish already prepared, not made together as part of the bonding and social entertainment. Eating food is emphasized over making food.

First of all, there’s the name that the family use daily,
Such as BC, Alberta, New Brunswick, or James,
Such as Prince Edward Island or Manitoba—
All of them sensible everyday names.

I assume you mean the one on Bloor west of Spadina. I agree, it was never a great store as a Dominion. It’s been renovated as a Metro but I would still choose to avoid it.

Nostalgia lives on Wikipedia:

And by the way, have you folks down south not realised that Dominion Voting Systems is just one more example of the hidden in plain sight Canadian infiltration?

The company maintains headquarters in Toronto and in Denver, Colorado.[4] Its name derives from the Dominion Elections Act .[29][30]

Thanks! Feel free! :blush:

Yes, that’s Forsey’s approach. On the other hand, if you accept the “repeal by implication in 1982” interpretation, that would apply not just to s. 3 of the 1867 Act, but also subsequent acts enacted prior to 1982, like the 1871 Act. As I said, I can’t see the courts ever needing to resolve the issue.

:notes: It’s mainly because of the meat! :notes:

You fiends!

Warm and fuzzy nostalgia indeed! And @Spoons has a far better memory than me – I recall the jingle now that it’s been shoved in my scatter-brained face, but I never would have remembered it on my own!

Incidentally, Google informs me that the conversion of Dominion stores to the Metro name began in August, 2008, beginning with the stores in the Toronto area, which is more recent than I would have guessed. So the supermarket closest to me when I last lived in Toronto would have been a Dominion for many years, where I shopped occasionally except when I was pretending to be Mr. Moneybags and went to Pusateri’s instead. That Dominion briefly became a Metro and then, in a typical sign of the times, became a high-rise condominium.

And that condo likely has a Cannabis store in it at street level

Never checked to see if it did, but out here in the 'burbs, a large cannabis store recently opened right beside my local liquor store. Very convenient for those who wish to get wasted in several different ways at once, and further convenience is provided by the fact – perhaps inspired by the cannabis store – that over a dozen fast-food outlets have recently opened in the immediate area! :smiley: :canada:

I came here to post this joke. But to be accurate, you need to use “eh” spelling.