Spanish
The official language of many countries of Latin America is Spanish, excluding Brazil, where the official language is Portuguese.
Brazil
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.
There are 21 countries in the world where Spanish is the primary official language. These countries are mainly located in Latin America and Spain.
Most people in Latin America speak either Spanish or Portuguese. Spanish is the dominant language in most countries, with Portuguese being the official language of Brazil.
No country has Latin as its official language anymore. Although it is frequently used in the Vatican.
Brazil (Portuguese), Haiti and French Guyana (French).
The second most-spoken language in Latin America is Portuguese.
Yes. The French Guiana, the Guyana and Suriname (all northwest of Brazil) are not considered part of Latin America, as the Guiana is a colony of France, the Guyana has English as the main language and Suriname has Dutch as the official language.
French is spoken in France, a middle European country. It's a very old language that originates from Latin. It's similar, because of origins from Latin in both counrties, to Spanish and slightly like Italians.
Latin was the official language.
The main language spoken across South America is Spanish, which is derived from the Latin language.