The Sierra Madre mountain range.
The Yucatan peninsula.
North America, though culturally it's part of Latin America and is sometimes considered (with Central America and the Caribbean islands) to form a "Middle America" intermediate between North and South.
The only common land-form throughout the region would be the Sierra Madre mountain range. However in terms of climates, such generalization is invalid. Mexico and Central have common climates, but Mexico has a large portion of its territory dominated by deserts, semi-arid and temperate highland forests (pines, oaks) that cannot be found in Central America. The climate akin to both regions would be tropical savanna (Koppen Aw and Am) and of course, tropical rainforests (Koppen Af) which would be found throughout southern Mexico and the coastal regions of Central America.
The Rocky Mountains
Central America qualifies as such. It is composed by Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Costa Rica and Panama.
From Mexico, Central and South America as Tomatl meaning a swelling fruit, brought to Europe by the Spanish in the 1550's
The countries of Central America, all together, from an isthmus that connects the United States to South America.
Guatemala used to belong to Mexico, but broke to form the Central American Federation, a territory which some years later, would in turn break into the Central American nations that now compose the "land bridge" between Mexico and South America. The best term to describe the relationship between Mexico and its southern neighbor is of "amicable indifference".
An autohotel is a form of short-stay hotel, often found in South and Central America, which allows people access to romantic activity.
mountains
A plateau.
The guava, a small tree in the Myrtle family, is a tropical fruit of Mexico, Central America and the northern part of South America. The skin of the guava fruit is very rich in ascorbic acid which is a form of Vitamin C.