The 'Iberian' peninsular.
Spain and Portugal are the two countries that make up the Iberian peninsula. In Spain they speak Spanish and in Portugal they speak Portuguese.
The most used languages in the Iberian Peninsula are Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan, Galician and Basque.
Portuguese is considered older than Spanish. Portuguese can be traced back to the Latin language brought to the Iberian Peninsula by the Romans, whereas Spanish developed later from Vulgar Latin in the northern regions of the peninsula.
The Spanish language originated in Spain, which is located in Europe on the Iberian Peninsula.
Portuguese evolved first from Galician-Portuguese in the 12th century in the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula. Spanish, as a distinct language, emerged later in the 13th century in the central region of the Iberian Peninsula.
Iberians, after whom the peninsula is named
That is Gibraltar, on the southern tip of the Spanish peninsula.
You mean the "large but thin finger" that protrudes from southern California? It is called the Baja California Peninsula (Spanish: Peninsula de Baja California).
It is called Iberian peninsula
Spanish
Yes, it is still called the Arabian Peninsula.
Spain and Portugal are the two countries that make up the Iberian peninsula. In Spain they speak Spanish and in Portugal they speak Portuguese.
Spain shares part of the Iberian Peninsula with Portugal. Spanish territory includes Canary Islands, Balearic Islands, the cities of Ceuta and Melilla and some smaller territories in Northern Africa.
The Spanish Inquisition.
peloponnesia?
Peninsula .
peninsula means nearly an island. its called greenwich peninsula because it is nearly an island