I guess you mean how big is the shoreline (longitude of coast) in Mexico. It is the 13th largest in the world, with 9,330 kilometers (5,799 miles) of coast, distributed among the Pacific Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico, Gulf of California and Caribbean Sea.
No. "Mexico" is too big to be considered as such. It however, has an isthmus, connecting the Gulf of Mexico with the Pacific Ocean. It is known as the Isthmus of Tehuantepec.
The Pacific Ocean borders Mexico.
The Pacific Ocean is the ocean on the western side of Mexico.
The Pacific qualifies as the ocean west of Mexico.
The Atlantic ocean, and it isn't an ocean but it is the majority of the coastline, The Gulf of Mexico
The Pacific Ocean, on the western coast of Mexico.
The Pacific Ocean is on the west coast of Mexico.
the two bodys of water surrounding Florida? The Atlantic Ocean on the East and the Gulf of Mexico on the West.
No. Mexico borders the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. There is no Antarctic Ocean. The ocean is called the Southern Ocean.
The Pacific Ocean qualifies as such. All of Mexico's western shores are touched by such ocean. Indirectly, the Atlantic qualifies as such too, if you consider both the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea as offshoots of such ocean.
The Pacific Ocean qualifies as the ocean separating Japan and Western Mexico.
Because it is protected by the Florida and Yucatan peninsulas. Think of the Gulf of Mexico as a large bay, protected from the open sea by such landforms.