| 1. Toronto |
To
make into or become a unit; consolidate. |
| 2. prime
minister |
The
capital and largest city of Alberta, Canada, in the central part
of the province north of Calgary. |
| 3. provinces |
A
territory governed as an administrative or political unit of a
country or empire. |
| 4. bilingual |
An
extensive chain of mountains or mountain ranges, especially the
principal mountain system of a continent. |
| 5. territories |
An
extensive area of flat or rolling, predominantly treeless grassland,
especially the large tract or plain of central North America. |
| 6. constitution |
The
capital of British Columbia, Canada, on southeast Vancouver Island
at the eastern end of the Strait of Juan de Fuca. |
| 7. prairie |
The
capital of Quebec, Canada, the French-speaking capital of the
province of Quebec. |
| 8. federation |
Using
or able to use two languages, especially with equal or nearly
equal fluency. |
| 9. Ottawa |
A
subdivision of Canada that is not a state and is administered
by an appointed or elected governor and elected legislature. |
| 10. cordillera
|
The
capital of Canada, in southeast Ontario at the confluence of the
Ottawa River and the Rideau Canal. |
| 11. Quebec
|
The
system of fundamental laws and principles that prescribes the
nature, functions, and limits of a government or another institution.
|
| 12. Inuit
|
The
capital and largest city of Ontario, Canada, in the southern part
of the province on Lake Ontario. |
| 13. Victoria
|
An
organization formed by merging several groups or parties. |
| 14. Edmonton |
The
head of the cabinet and often also the chief executive of a parliamentary
democra. |
| 15. unification |
A
member of a group of Eskimoan peoples inhabiting the Arctic from
northern Alaska eastward to eastern Greenland, particularly those
of Canada. |