jhbryaniv:
[GOOGLE][/GOOGLE]
No actually it is just two or three letters. . . .
Ok, here we go. There's a video on youtube at this adress:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=82E6Zxva_TA
It's in french and the Quebec guy tries to explain what he is to a French French (a French from France).
It is at the end of the video from 1:40 to 2:30. You will see it takes a little more letters than 2 or 3

The transcript is this:
Moi, chu un Canadien, Québécois; un Français Canadien français; un Amaricain du nord Français, un francophone Québécois-Canadien, un Québécois dexpression canadienne-française française
On est des Canadiens, Américains francophones dAmérique du Nord, des Franco-québécois...
his wife then adds: «On est des Franco-canadiens du Québec, des Québécois-Canadiens
It translate roughly as:
Me, I'm a canadian, quebecois; A french canadian french; a north american french; a francophone quebecois-canadian; a quebecois of french french-canadian expression... We are canadians, francophone americans of North America, franco-quebecois..
his wife then adds: We are franco-canadians from Quebec, quebecois-canadians.
So that's what we are. Is it more clear to you now?
