The official language in most of Central America is Spanish.
Well, there aren't whole continents that speak Spanish as their official language. Almost all of South America has Spanish as their official language, except for Brazil, which speaks Portuguese. Parts of Africa speak Spanish, Spain obviously, and then Mexico.
Portuguese, due to previous colonization, is the most popular language. It is the official language of Brazil, which holds over half of the population. Spanish is spoken in almost all of the other countries.
Including Mexico, there are 7 countries in Central America that speak Spanish as an official language: Mexico, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama. In Belize (formerly British Honduras) the official language is still English.
French was the official language of England for almost 400 years. There were many forms of French dialect used in England from 1066 to 1453.
The Indian constitution recognizes, for now, 18 official Indian languages. But, almost each of these 18 languages, include different dialects or variations of that language. Besides these 18 languages, there are other languages which are recognized by the central government, but not as official languages.
The Republic of Ireland. Irish (Gaelic) is the first official language, although it is not spoken by very many people. English is the second official language and the one that almost everyone speaks.
Central America is much smaller than Mexico, by almost four times:Mexico: 1,958,200 sq km (761,606 sq mi)Central America: 523,780 sq km (202,233 sq mi)
Almost all of the language we use today in America is slang.
Central America used to belong to the New Spain, as present-day Mexico was known until 1821 until its independence from Spain was attained. Therefore, both Mexico and Central America share common traits such as language (Spanish), religion (Roman Catholicism) and customs inherited from the colonial days, when the region was controlled by the Spanish Crown. However, since the region split off from Spain, each country acquired traits on its own. For example, mariachis are almost non-existent in Central America.
Mainly, almost all of South America and Central America - with the exception of some small countries, like Haiti and Suriname. Also, it should be noted that many of these countries speak additional languages - for example, in Bolivia, Spanish is the main language, but yet there are millions of people who don't speak Spanish; only Quechua or Aymara. Also, of course Spain, Equatorial Guinea, Philippines. Several other countries have smaller amounts of people who speak Spanish - for example, the United States has a fairly large Spanish-speaking minority.
Tornadoes can form almost anywhere in North America but occur most often on the central plains of the United States.
The United States has never actually declared any language as being its offical language. English is the de facto language as almost everyone speaks it, but it is not officially mandated.