By definition, Latin Americans speak Spanish, Portuguese and French. Most speak either Spanish or Portuguese.
The majority of Latin Americans in the Western Hemisphere speak Spanish as their first language.
Spanish. Very few people beyond doctors and lawyers use Latin.
No. Languages spoken in Latin America include Spanish, French and Portuguese. People who speak English are known as Anglo-Americans.
People from the countries south of the United States who speak Spanish, Portuguese or French, languages derived from ancient Latin. Hence the name Latin-America.
I speak and study Latin. So people do speak and study Latin.
Brazil is in Latin America, whose people are Latin Americans or latinos. Latin America comprises the countries of latin languages: Spanish and Portuguese, that were colonized by Spain and Portugal. Latin languages are the ones derived from ancient Latin and the most representative today are: Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, French, Romanian, Catalan.
English is the most commonly spoken language among African Americans. Additionally, some African Americans also speak African languages such as Yoruba, Igbo, or Twi, depending on their heritage or upbringing. Spanish is another language that some African Americans may speak, particularly if they have roots in Latin America or the Caribbean.
Bolivian people speak Latin American Spanish which is a little different from Spanish.
Roughly 420 million people in Latin America speak Spanish as their primary language.
Hispanic-Americans speak Spanish and English. Hispanic people are language-defined, for they speak Spanish as native language. (Simply learning fluent Spanish, does NOT magically turn you Hispanic!) Some Americans who are descendants of Hispanics don't speak Spanish anymore, so they just speak English as their active tongues.
There is no such thing as a "person from latin". Latin is a language, not a place.If you are talking about a person from Latin America, most speak either Portuguese or Spanish. Some speak French.