Spain has a lot of sunshine during summer. It is hot and dry at that time, but rainy and cold in the winter.
In Spain during the summer it is super hot, that you can not stay outside, not even in the shade! In winter time, it's not too cold, but every couple of years, it snows in the northern area.
No. There is no region in Spain that has temperatures below 60oF or 15oC during the summer months with the exception of some particularly high-altitude areas like the Sierra Nevada. For the most part Spain during the summer hovers around 80oF to 100oF or 27oF to 38oF.
Winter
Obviously Canada. Sweden and Norway also have extreme northern territory.
Gazpacho is probably the best known cold soup from Spain.
During the Cold War, Spain's major conflicts were largely shaped by its internal politics and its strategic position in Europe. The country was under the authoritarian regime of Francisco Franco, who, although initially neutral during World War II, aligned with the West during the Cold War, receiving U.S. military and economic aid. Key tensions included the struggle against Franco's dictatorship, which led to opposition movements, and Spain's eventual transition to democracy in the late 1970s. Additionally, Spain's colonial conflicts, particularly in Western Sahara, added to its complex geopolitical landscape during this period.
Oslo is not in Sweden, it's in Norway. The average temperature of Oslo in January is between -5°C and 0°C.
During the Cold War, Spain was not a democratic country; it was under the authoritarian regime of Francisco Franco, who ruled from 1939 until his death in 1975. Franco's regime suppressed political opposition, limited civil liberties, and maintained a one-party state with the Falange party. Although Spain began to transition to democracy after Franco's death, this shift occurred in the late 1970s, well after the Cold War's height.
Spain is a very hot country:D
To win
Cold and usually snowy.