Each of these countries has a different answer:Philippines: Spanish is a heritage language, but not a native or official languageGuam: Spanish has no role; English is the language of the citizenry and the official languageEquatorial Guinea: Spanish is an official language and the native language of a minority; most people have a local Bantu language as their native language
The main language of Cuba is Spanish.
Leticia Alaniz was born in Mexico and her native language is Spanish.
Chile was once a Spanish colony. Their language is not Spanish, but Chilenisimo, a combination of Spanish and Mapudungun, the native language.
no
Quechua is a native language of Peru, so no.
There are 21 countries where Spanish is the official language: Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Equatorial Guinea, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Spain, Uruguay, and Venezuela. Additionally, Spanish is widely spoken in many other countries as a second language.
It is their native language.
Spanish is spoken by over 460 million people worldwide as their first language, with the majority residing in Latin America and Spain. It is the second most spoken language in the world in terms of native speakers.
The word for entered is entro in the Spanish language. Spanish is considered a Romance language that developed from Latin. More than 400 million speak Spanish as their native language.
Bolivia used to be a Spanish colony in the same way that the United States (or at least the relevant parts) used to be an English colony. As a result, Bolivia's landed elite spoke Spanish and built a country that caters to that interest. However, as many Bolivians are natives (indígenas), the native tongues of Quechua and Aymara hold sway in rural Bolivia.
Either English or Spanish--Spanish if you're counting native speakers, English if you're counting native and non-native.