Examples of using "Canadees" in a sentence and their english translations:
- Tom's Canadian.
- Tom is Canadian.
- Tom is a Canadian.
- He is Canadian.
- He's Canadian.
Are you Canadian?
I'm Canadian.
Is Tom Canadian?
Jim is Canadian.
Tom's girlfriend is Canadian.
Evangeline Lilly is Canadian.
All of them are Canadian.
Is Tom really Canadian?
- My girlfriend is Canadian.
- My boyfriend is Canadian.
Tom has become a Canadian citizen.
My husband is Canadian.
Is Tom a Canadian citizen?
Are you a Canadian citizen?
You're Canadian, aren't you?
I married a Canadian.
Three of them were Canadian.
My first girlfriend was Canadian.
Tom's cellmate is a Canadian.
Is Tom American or Canadian?
Our French teacher is Canadian.
The winner was a Canadian.
- Tom knows I'm Canadian.
- Tom knows that I'm Canadian.
The gentleman is a Canadian economist.
- Did you know I'm Canadian?
- Did you know that I'm Canadian?
- I wish I'd been born a Canadian.
- I wish I'd been born Canadian.
Tom doesn't know that I'm Canadian.
- I thought you were a Canadian.
- I thought that you were a Canadian.
He married a Canadian girl.
Tom said that Mary wasn't Canadian.
Am I really the only Canadian here?
I assumed you were Canadian.
There's no way Tom is Canadian. I'm Canadian and I can't understand his accent.
He's a Canadian, not an American.
You're the only Canadian in our school.
Tom was the only Canadian at the meeting.
I'm a Canadian living in Australia.
You said almost all of your friends were Canadians.
I'm not the only Canadian living in Boston.
- I don't think Tom knows that I'm Canadian.
- I don't think that Tom knows I'm Canadian.
- I don't think that Tom knows that I'm Canadian.
- I don't think Tom knows I'm Canadian.
- Tom is a typical Canadian.
- Tom is a typical Canadian man.
Because of its origins, Canadian English has features of both American and British English.