O Canada
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O Canada is from the Country: Canada.
It does not have any other known facts besides being from Canada.
O Canada is associated with Canada.
O Canada is from Canada.
O Canada
Summary
O Canada is a national anthem[1]. It ranks in the top 0.22% of national_anthem entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,898 views/month, #1 of 447).[2]
Key Facts
- O Canada is in the country of Canada[3].
- O Canada's instance of is recorded as national anthem[4].
- O Canada's composer is recorded as Calixa Lavallée[5].
- O Canada's Commons category is recorded as O Canada[6].
- O Canada's language of work or name is recorded as Quebec French[7].
- O Canada's language of work or name is recorded as Canadian English[8].
- O Canada was distributed by music streaming[9].
- O Canada's country of origin is recorded as Canada[10].
- O Canada comprises O Canada[11].
- O Canada comprises O Canada[12].
- O Canada's lyricist is recorded as Adolphe-Basile Routhier[13].
- O Canada's lyricist is recorded as Robert Stanley Weir[14].
- O Canada's tonality is recorded as G major[15].
- O Canada's Commons gallery is recorded as O Canada[16].
- O Canada's title is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'O Canada'}[17].
- O Canada's title is recorded as {'lang': 'fr-ca', 'text': 'Ô Canada'}[18].
- O Canada's permanent duplicated item is recorded as Q12715470[19].
- O Canada's copyright status is recorded as public domain[20].
- O Canada's copyright status is recorded as public domain[21].
- O Canada's has lyrics is recorded as O Canada[22].
- O Canada's has lyrics is recorded as O Canada[23].
Body
Works and Contributions
Things named for O Canada include D'oh Canada[24], a television series episode[25], directed by Matthew Nastuk[26].
Why It Matters
O Canada ranks in the top 0.22% of national_anthem entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,898 views/month, #1 of 447).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[27] It is known by 49 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]
Entities named for it include D'oh Canada[24], a television series episode[25], directed by Matthew Nastuk[26].