None of those is a country.
There are five states in the US where Spanish is predominantly spoken: New Mexico, California, Texas, Arizona, and Florida. Additionally, Spanish is widely spoken in many communities throughout the country.
That is Spanish. To translate that into English that would be "provinces"
The country that originally colonized the state of Florida was the Spanish.
Texas became a "state"(its not a country)that's one of the main languages spoken there are spanish because it is on the border of Mexico and many people immigrated there to Mexico thus they become a state with one of its main languages to be spanish.
No Middle Eastern country speaks Latin as its primary language. Latin is primarily used as a ceremonial and official language within the Vatican City, an independent city-state in Rome, Italy.
English is spoken in the state of Colorado, although there is a significant Hispanic population that speaks Spanish.
It depends on what country you are in. If you are referring to the U.S., it depends on which state you are in.
No, the Philippines (long ago, known as the Philippines Islands) is a country. A person who comes from there speaks Filipino (also called Tagalog). The Philippines is made up of regions and provinces. But it is not a state.
There are quite a few people in California who speak Spanish, however, the majority of the population speaks English as a first language.
The state that contains the name of a country bordering the U.S. is Montana. It shares a border with Canada, and the name "Montana" is derived from the Spanish word for "mountain."
Bengali is mainly spoken in the Indian state of West Bengal and the neighboring country of Bangladesh. It is also spoken by expatriate communities around the world.
None. However, there is 1 Spanish speaking country that became a U.S. territory: Puerto Rico.