Daily life in Mexico varies a lot according to age, gender, and ethnicity. Some of the things they do come from America, but not everything. If you were a peasant, your life would be different than a middle-class worker.
The daily life in Mexico is similar to most of the other parts of the world. People engage in different forms of business with most cowboys emerging from this region. Most people have vast lands which they use as ranches.
Life for adults is very hard there they need to feed the family and they work hard and get paid less. The children play little games with other neighborhood kids and usually go through rough times also. Life in El Salvador is very hard and restless for adults. Life in El Salvador may be not so rough for gets but may be in bad conditions for the child it could be like a little experience for then in the future.
Mexico is an "emerging market", "developing country" or "newly industrialized country" because although it is the eleventh largest economy in the world (USD$1,683 billion for 2011), it has an ongoing industrialization, where agriculture activities are still important but are rapidly being outpaced by industrial (specially manufacturing) activities. This means Mexico is not fully developed, as many regions within the country have a quality of life equivalent to those of Western Europe, whereas there are other regions with education, life expectancy and economic advancement equivalent to those countries found in Sub-Saharan Africa.
For instance, the Human Development Index (HDI) is a ranking created by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) to measure countries or regions according to three basic population parameters: health, education and income. For Mexico, which is composed by 31 states and one federal district, the Federal District and Nuevo Leon had the highest HDI in 2004 (0.8837 and 0.8513, respectively), while the lowest corresponded to Chiapas (0.7185) and Oaxaca (0.7336). As a comparison, the Federal District and Nuevo Leon indexes are equivalent to those of the Czech Republic and Lithuania while Chiapas and Oaxaca correspond to those of Vietnam and Iran.
On a municipality level, this contrasts are much more dramatic: The Benito Juarez district (Federal District), the San Pedro Garza Garcia municipality (Nuevo Leon) and the San Sebastian Tula municipality (Oaxaca) have the highest HDI in Mexico (0.9509, 0.95, 0.9204, respectively) which correspond to the life quality levels of Norway, Australia and Spain. By contrast, Tehuipango (Veracruz, 0.4985), Coicoyan de las Flores (Oaxaca, 0.4768), Batopilas (Chihuahua, 0.4734) and Cochoapa el Grande (Guerrero, 0.4354) correspond to the quality of life of Madagascar, Haiti, Kenya and Benin.
Therefore, until Mexico attains certain "threshold of development" where all its people has a certain quality of life, it will continue to be considered a "developing country".
Very much like that on modern US or European cities, including amenities such as malls, restaurants, libraries, parks and other kinds of recreation. These also include the cons of any modern city: traffic congestion, higher crime rates close to downtown and more expensive cost of living at certain areas.
See related links for some examples.
There are many regions within the country with a quality of life equivalent to that of Western Europe, whereas there are other regions with education, life expectancy and economic advancement equivalent to those of Sub-Saharan Africa.
For example, the San Pedro Garza Garcia municipality in the northern state of Nuevo Leon (143 Km or 89 miles from the Mexico-US border) has a quality of life equivalent to that of Australia, while Cochoapa el Grande, on the southern state of Guerrero (259 Km or 161 miles south of Mexico City) has a quality of life equivalent to Benin, a poor, corrupt and hunger-striken African country.
See related links for some pictures.
It's like here ,but you don't have to stay inside all day along.
Very hot I would assume.
Awesome.
Question is not clear. Which religion, and when?
Daily life was very tight
what is a Brazilian person daily life like what takes place in the week days
The most similar game to Daily Life is the Sims.
I don't know that's why I asked y'all! Uggh stupid people these days !-__-
what was life like in 1930's? what was life like in 1930's?
no
The Llama
death
Filipinos typically wear comfortable clothing such as t-shirts, jeans, and shorts for daily life. Traditional Filipino attire like the barong (for men) and the balintawak or terno (for women) are usually reserved for formal events or special occasions. Accessorizing with hats, sunglasses, and slippers is also common in Filipino fashion.
Sweet.
measurements effect oyr daily life like an engineer is using many measuring instruments in his daily work.