فقرة  برزنتيشن بحث موضوع ملخص   جاهز باللغة الانجليزية  انشاء
ـ موضوع انجليزي عن ابدا قصير كيفية كتابة موضوع تعبير باللغة الانجليزية توجيهي قواعد كتابة تعبير بالانجليزي طريقة سهلة لكتابة تعبير بالانجليزي موضوع تعبير انجليزي يصلح لكل المواضيع كتابة تعبير بالانجليزي عن نفسك وصف تعبير انجليزي يصلح لكل المواضيع موضوع انشاء شامل لكل المواضيع موضوع يصلح لجميع المواضيع موضوع تعبير انجليزي جاهز برجراف ينفع لاى موضوع تعبير
مونتريال كندا بالانجليزي
مدينة مونتريال
مونتريال الأحداث القادمة
المناخ في مونتريال
جامعة مونتريال بكندا
الحياة في مونتريال
السياحة في مونتريال
مونتريال كندا العرب المسافرون

مونتريال نقاط الاهتمام


2 million inhabitants. Island of 500 km 2 . The largest city in Quebec (French-speaking province of Canada)
Cold and snowy winters (-25 to 5 ° C), fairly hot summers (15 to 30 ° C)
Currency: Canadian dollar $ 1 = $ 0.75

French-speaking gate of the New World placed on a large island of the St. Lawrence, the Quebec metropolis enchants with its diversity. Its Old Port with the evocative low houses of Old Europe rubs shoulders with the glass towers of a typical North American downtown, while the opulent Victorian homes of Westmount, historic stronghold of the English-speaking aristocracy, meet the "triplex" staircase outside the Plateau and other former working-class suburbs of the French-speaking region.

Montreal boasts a Chinatown, a Little Italy, and many other communities have founded real villages; its Latin Quarter is one of the epicentres of a bubbling student life and its Quartier international a showcase of contemporary architecture. The city has also tamed the harsh Canadian winter by inventing a "double" underground and putting northern sports in the spotlight in its huge parks. But, from the first beautiful days, she returns to the cult of the sun. Flower then terraces of bistrots and light clothes!

Whatever the season, there is a combination of a relaxed lifestyle and a sense of celebration: its neighborhood cafés and trendy lounge bars are a warm welcome, and countless restaurants invite you to discover the culinary world. The vitality of its artistic scene makes it pride of Quebec, and there is always one or more festivals on display to join his "gang" and "party".


Old Montreal
The cradle of Montreal: its cobbled streets evoke the time of the French Regime, with their gray stone houses with slate roofs. But on the quays of what was in the nineteenth century. the first cereal port in the world, leisure has succeeded to toil: spa on the water, pedalo or tango course in summer; ice skating, parties and fireworks in winter ... Animation guaranteed!
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
The oldest art museum in Canada (1860) has a rich and constantly enriched fund. There are concerts and other activities, often related to its temporary exhibitions. The permanent collection covers all modes of expression, from all eras and from all continents. But it is primarily the section of Quebec and Canadian art that catches the eye.
St. Catherine Street
The vital artery of the city center since the 19th century. Bordered by various signs, connected to the underground network of shopping malls and served by five metro stations, its western portion is a Mecca of "shopping". 15 km long, "Ste-Cath" also crosses the Quartier des Spectacles and, further to the east, the Village, heart of the gay community.
Golden Square Mile
From the Victorian era to the 1930s, the English-speaking elite, enriched by finance and commerce, had sumptuous residences erected in this neighborhood, henceforth referred to as "Golden Square Mile". They are admired in the perimeter formed by Pine Avenue, Sherbrooke, University and Simpson Streets. To the west, Cedar Avenue leads to the Westmount neighborhood with its neo-Tudor and Neogeorgian mansions.
Latin Quarter
Historical intellectual home of the French-speaking community, this district remains a student stronghold, revolving around the University of Quebec in Montreal (UQAM), the Grande Bibliothèque and the Cinémathèque. Its restaurants, cinemas and music bars frequented by a colorful youth are worth to the rue Saint-Denis a hectic nightlife.The fever falls on the edge of the Saint-Louis square, lined with stately Victorian mansions.
St. Laurent Boulevard
The main north-south axis of the city traditionally delimits its English-speaking (west) and French-speaking (east) neighborhoods. It is especially the corridor that successive waves of immigrants have borrowed. From Chinatown to Little Italy, restaurants, community centers and small businesses from all continents come together. The symbolic significance of this cosmopolitanism has earned the Main("main street") a National Historic Site.
Plateau Mont-Royal
Near the city center, with vast green spaces, the "Plateau" is a neighborhood where it is very good to live ... and to stroll. Charming stroll through its green streets with houses with wooden galleries and outdoor stairs, or window shopping rue Saint-Denis and av. from Mount Royal, where eco-friendly bookstores, music stores and stalls compete with them in theaters, bars and fashionable restaurants ... Both popular and trendy, this artists' landmark is home to many "accursed French".
Mont Royal
The 232-meter hill built by Jacques Cartier in 1535 remains the roof of the city and one of its iconic landmarks. The vast park on its south-east flank attracts sportsmen and strollers in any season. Its Grand Chalet offers a panoramic view of the city center and the river, and the Camilien-Houde belvedere dominates the east of Montreal. A few blocks away, the Saint Joseph Oratory looks west and north of the metropolis.
Jean-Talon Market
Primeurs de Lanaudière or Montérégie, fish and seafood from Gaspésie, game, cheese, honey, maple syrup, wine, cider ... we find on this market all the artisanal productions in Quebec, often labeled "organic". This gustative journey can continue by tasting a pastilla or sushi on the spot, or pushing up to the trattorias of Little Italy.
Olympic Park
A symbol of the 1976 Summer Games and the urban utopias of the time, the sloping tower of the Olympic Stadium can be seen from far away! Normal: in the genre, it's the highest in the world. From its summit, one overlooks the futuristic arena that still hosts some football matches. The nearby velodrome has turned into a living observatory of the American nature: the Biodôme. After greeting lynx and penguins, we discover the Botanical Garden, the insectarium, and the planetarium.

Old Montreal / International District
Bathed by the majestic St. Lawrence, the "Old", the historic heart of Montreal was until the late nineteenth century. one of the largest port, industrial and financial centers on the continent. Renovated in the 1970s, its cobbled streets have seen museums, shops and restaurants flourish. On the glorious Place d'Armes watch the iconic Notre-Dame Basilica and the very first skyscraper of the city. To the west, the disused warehouses are transformed into offices, lofts and art galleries, the first landmarks of the Griffintown district. To the north is the International Quarter, a taste of downtown, bristling with buildings.
Downtown / Chinatown
At the foot of Mount Royal, the cosmopolitan Montreal looks like a North American giant: skyscrapers, checkerboard streets, endless underground shopping galleries, universities, museums and, the backbone of the area, the feverish St. Catherine Street, saturated with shops, bars and restaurants. When it's pedestrian in summer, at festivals, the city center attracts crowds: many shows on the Place des Arts, temple of dance, theater, music, opera and contemporary art . To the east, the boulevard Saint-Laurent opens the doors of the little Chinatown.
Latin Quarter / Village / Parc Jean-Drapeau
Bars of students, bistros, theaters and cinemas give the Latin Quarter. On rue Saint-Denis, its main artery, Victorian homes are dedicated to "shopping". To the east, St. Catherine gives way to the Gay Village, proudly draped in the colors of the rainbow; atmosphere guaranteed night and day. To the south, the Jacques Cartier Bridge leads to the Notre-Dame and Sainte-Hélène islands, which form Parc Jean-Drapeau, home to the futuristic pavilions of the 1967 World's Fair and Montréal's hotspots. attractions, casino, formula 1 circuit ...
Plateau Mont-Royal
Formerly popular and working, the Plateau becomes one of the most fashionable neighborhoods in North America: Montreal's bohemian bourgeoisie is home to its houses with multicolored facades and crazy outdoor stairs. Shops, restaurants and bookshops jostle on the two major axes, the rue Saint-Denis and the Avenue du Mont-Royal, where you mingle with the crowd to get lost in the adjacent lanes.Ride your bike, stroll in the park La Fontaine before having a drink on the terrace, maybe this is the sweetness of life in Montreal?
Mount Royal / Outremont / Westmount
Affectionately called the "Mountain", Mount Royal dominates Montreal from its height of 232 m. A cure for urban choking, the park that occupies it, concentrated on Québec's great spaces, remains the guarantor of the city's human size (no skyscraper can go beyond it).On either side of the mountain, two other summits: west, Westmount, shady streets and sumptuous green spaces, where the English-speaking bourgeoisie lives; to the east, the elegant Outremont, mostly French-speaking, with vast mansions and chic shopping streets, Laurier and Bernard.
Mile End / Little Italy / Rosemont
Small dynamic neighborhoods with Mediterranean accents, more and more popular with trendy youth, the Mile End and Little Italy revolve around the same axis, Boulevard Saint-Laurent. Italian cafes, Greek restaurants and kosher bakeries color Fairmount Avenue, Saint-Viateur Avenue and Dante Street. A great flight to the east, to discover Rosemont-La Petite-Patrie and the promenade Masson, former working-class suburbs. Around, prestigious Beaux-Arts style public buildings and old industrial buildings.
The hotel offering is vast, but relatively expensive. Difficult to find a compromise between the small, inexpensive but unhospitable hotel, and the luxury hotel. To benefit from a quality service at a reasonable price, it is necessary to move away from the heart of the city. In the high season - from May to September, and even more so during festivals or the Canadian Grand Prix - the rates increase and it is advisable to book several months in advance.

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