2 n. — Ethnicities, derogatory, offensive [< loan translation of Canadian French 'tête carrée']
(when used by Francophone Canadians) an English Canadian.
Type: 6. Memorial — A loan translation from French, the term has been used especially in print sources since 1976, when the sovereignist/separatist Parti Québécois came to power in the province, taking a counter-stance to Anglophone hegemony in Quebec.
See also: peasoup ((1)) peasouper
- The term is included for reasons of historical accuracy and completeness. It is not intended, as clearly indicated in the usage labels "derogatory" and "extremely offensive", as a term for current use or a term, meaning or usage that is in any way condoned.
- 1977  English Canadians are popularly known as squareheads among some French Canadians. Nick reports that the custom lends itself to such jokes as: "What do you give an anglophone for a headache? Four aspirins, one for each corner." 
- 1988  Someone had cut out the column, drawn a square around the photo of my head and inscribed the caption "Tete carree" (a Quebec slang term for anglos is square-head). 
- 1990  The same leader would demand an apology from the supposedly professional adults who run a radio station that broadcasts racist slogans such as "square-head," the moral equivalent of calling a French-speaking person a "frog" [...] 
- 2002  Like the students from Lennoxville Elementary School (see story page 6), my family went to the newly renovated Nature and Science wing of the Musée du séminaire de Sherbrooke. [...] But what impressed this square-head was that all information (on the exhibits, at least) was in both languages. Granted, the English was a bit smaller than the French (but unless you're legally blind, who cares?) 
- 2006  I was with a Francophone friend. "Are you insane," he hissed at me.
"What?" I said loudly. "I'm drunk as the devil. Isn't everybody?"
"You're the only one here who's drunk, Squarehead!" somebody said behind me. 
- 2016  It is a staple of Pequiste rhetoric that, while the squareheads might indulge in some uncharacteristic fits of emotion in the days immediately after a vote to secede, before long the logic of commerce and self-interest would bring them to the table.