No. Maybe Canada and the United States, but Mexico is a developing country and the effort required to integrate it would be very difficult. For instance:
both border US, both part North America
Yes, it's in North America along with the United States of America.
The United States shares land borders with Canada to the north and Mexico to the south.
North America. +++ Canada, the USA and Mexico are all on one continent. A continent is a fully-natural, very large land-mass - its divisions into countries is artificial.
No. South Africa has its own president. North America has more than one president, as there is one in Mexico and one in the United States of America. Canada does not have a president.
To Canada you can; to Mexico you can't.
A perennial grass native to North America, from Mexico to Canada. It is one of the main grasses in the North American tallgrass prairie.
Cougar/Mountain Lion/Puma/Catamount/Panther (all of North America) Jaguar (southern United States to Central America) Bobcat (southern Canada to northern Mexico) Canadian Lynx (Canada and northern United States) Ocelot (Mexico and Central America and southern United States) Margay (Mexico and Central America) Oncilla (Central America) Jaguarundi (Central America, Mexico and the southern United States)
One of the agreements was NAFTA. It was between Canada, North America and Mexico in regards to trading items with one another.
Mexico is one of America's largest neighbours, sharing the second largest border with the US. They are the third largest trading partner of the US after Canada and China.
Mexico is hot all year... Canada is warm and cold.
Let me do you a favor... I'll name all of them for you since there are only three. Canada, USA, Mexico