Latin is no longer spoken today. It is still taught in schools and universities because it is the basis for many modern languages, for example Italian, French, Spanish, English, Portuguese, and many more. It is also used heavily in scientific and legal terminology. Languages based on Latin are known as Romance Languages because it was the language of ancient Rome. Please see a more comprehensive list on the link below.
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.
Yes, Venezuela is considered a Latin American country. It is located in South America and its official language is Spanish, which is common among many Latin American countries.
The largest non-Spanish-speaking country in South America is Brazil (where they speak Portuguese), but you can get creative with Suriname (Dutch), Guyana (English and Guarani), and French Guyana (French).
Taco flavor kissesThere is only one Mexico, and by other "mexican countries" do you mean Latin Countries? If they are Latin, they speak Spanish.
Spain. Spain is in Europe. It is the "mother country" for all Spanish speaking Latin countries.
Brazil is the only Latin American country where Portuguese is the predominant language.
They speak Spanish, all of Latin America does except Brasil.
Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador are the Latin American countries with Mayan populations, who speak Mayan.
Because that's pretty much the definition of "Latin" America: any country in the Americas that speak a Romance language, such as Spanish, Portuguese, or French.
Because that's pretty much the definition of "Latin" America: any country in the Americas that speak a Romance language, such as Spanish, Portuguese, or French.
Spain because most countries speak spanish
The Federative Republic of Brazil is located in South America. It is the largest country in Latin America and most people speak Portuguese.