In terms of what? Climate? That would be Argentina, northern Mexico and Chile, which have temperate, snowy and desert climates. In cultural terms? Probably northern Mexico is more like the Southwestern US, as California, Nevada, Utah, Texas, Arizona, New Mexico and parts of Colorado and Wyoming used to be part of Mexico.
Latin America is part of North America and South America.
Petroleum, Country are Mexico and Venezuela.
Spain conquered most of Latin America, Central America, and part of North America (states like Florida, Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, Nevada, California and so on).
north america, central america, south america, and brazil .
Is Mexico City.
Latin America
Latin America's most populated city is Mexico City. The three most populated cities south of the equator are Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, and Sau Paulo.
Latin America is a region and does not have a government. The individual countries that are in Latin America have democracies for the most part.
Growing up in PR, geography class stated that North America was Canada and the USA; Central America from Mexico to Panama; South America from Colombia to Chile. This is the case in Most of Latin America, however, in the US Mexico is considered North America.The Caribbean is considered Insular America, from the latin word insula ("island"), at least in Latin America. In the USA, it's probably just an attachment to Central America, and at the rate they're going it'll probably be "North America" by 2020 and just divide the continent between North and South.
The second most-spoken language in Latin America is Portuguese.
Latin America's most populated city is Mexico City. The three most populated cities south of the equator are Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, and Sau Paulo.
Creoles were most in favor of revolution in Latin America.