Saint in St. John’s, the capital of Newfoundland and Labrador, is always abbreviated; and the city name ends with an apostrophe s.
- The oldest commercial street in North America is Water Street in St. John’s, Newfoundland.
A native or resident of the city may be called a St. John’ser or a St. John’san.
- St. John’sers enjoy attending the Newfoundland and Labrador Folk Festival held every summer in Bannerman Park.
While the demonyms St. John’ser and St. John’san are found in newspapers and magazines, they are often replaced in more formal writing by native, resident or inhabitant of St. John’s, or some similar phrase.
- The residents of St. John’s are proud to participate in the Royal St. John’s Regatta, North America’s oldest continuing sporting event.
St. John’s is commonly used as a modifier, while St. John’ser is not.
- The sign in front of St. John’s City Hall reads “Mile/Kilometre 0 of the Trans Canada Highway.”
St. John’s is commonly used as a modifier, while St. John’ser is not.
- The sign in front of St. John’s City Hall reads “Mile/Kilometre 0 of the Trans Canada Highway.”
Copyright notice for Writing Tips Plus
© His Majesty the King in Right of Canada, represented by the Minister of Public Services and Procurement
A tool created and made available online by the Translation Bureau, Public Services and Procurement Canada
Search by related themes
Want to learn more about a theme discussed on this page? Click on a link below to see all the pages on the Language Portal of Canada that relate to the theme you selected. The search results will be displayed in Language Navigator.
Related links
- Writing Tips Plus (home page)
- Writing tools
- Language Navigator (for fast access to language tips)
- TERMIUM Plus®