See also: Quebecker and Québecker

English edit

Noun edit

Québécker (plural Québéckers)

  1. Alternative form of Quebecer
    • 1992, David Ketterer, “International Arrival of Canadian Science Fiction”, in Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy, Bloomington, Ind., Indianapolis, Ind.: Indiana University Press, →ISBN, page 140:
      Gouanvic’s SF: Dix années de science-fiction québécoise (Montréal, 1988; “Autres mers, autres mondes” series) is a competent anthology of ten high-point strories. In the same year Gouanvic also published in the same series Dérives 5 (Montréal, 1988), another francophone anthology; of the five stories, which all seem to focus on the perversion of social power, those by two of the four Québéckers represented, Jean Pettigrew and Esther Rochon, are particularly fine.
    • 2006, Barry Callaghan, Raise You Five: Essays & Encounters 1964-2004, Toronto, Ont.: McArthur & Company, →ISBN, page 138:
      I ended up in Québec. And I did think I could help. I did think English Québéckers were getting a bum deal.
    • 2018, Willem Salet, editor, The Routledge Handbook of Institutions and Planning in Action, Routledge:
      Or as Ouali, 20 years old, who arrived in Canada from Algeria only 11 months before we began the workshops in Saint-Michel, describes: “Arabs, Haitians, Québéckers, and South Americans play together”.