Only Brazil do not have Spanish as an official language. The official language in Brazil is Portuguese.
Spanish and Portuguese are the two main languages spoken in Latin America. Spanish is the predominant language in most countries, while Portuguese is primarily spoken in Brazil.
Portuguese is the official language of Brazil. Brazil is the only South American country not to have Spanish as its official language.
Brazil is the only Latin American country where Portuguese is the predominant language.
Various islands in the Caribbean, Mexico, Peru, Argentina, and other Latin American countries, but not (Portuguese) Brazil.
Spanish is not the primary language spoken in Brazil, a Latin American country where Portuguese is the official language.
The only South American countries where Spanish is not the first official language are Brazil (Portuguese), Suriname (Dutch), Guyana (English) and French Guiana (French). However, Spanish is spoken widely throughout the whole of the South American continent as a second or third official language.
Spanish is spoken in 21 countries, while Portuguese is spoken in 9 countries. There are some countries where both languages are spoken, such as Brazil, which speaks Portuguese, and Paraguay and Uruguay, which speak Spanish.
Brazil and Suriname do not use Spanish as their official language. Brazil's official language is Portuguese, while Suriname's official languages are Dutch and Sranan Tongo.
Brazil is the South American country that does not speak Spanish. The official language of Brazil is Portuguese.
Spanish is spoken in South American countries due to the region's history of colonization by Spain. Brazil, on the other hand, was colonized by Portugal, which is why Portuguese is the official language spoken in the country.
Brazil