Only one country in North America (proper)speaks Spanish: Mexico. Canada speaks both English and French (but English in more parts), and the United States speaks mainly English.
Considering the continent as containing everything north of South America, there are the 6 Spanish-dominant countries of Central America: Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama. There are also the Spanish island nations of Cuba and the Dominican Republic.
(Puerto Rico, a commonwealth of the US, also has Spanish as its predominant language.)
The official language for the country of Chile is Spanish. Chile is located in South America and the capitol is the city of Santiago.
Belize is the only country in Central America that has English as its official language, alongside Spanish and Belizean Creole.
The official language of many countries of Latin America is Spanish, excluding Brazil, where the official language is Portuguese.
Costa Rica is a country in Central America where Spanish is the official language spoken by the majority of the population.
Brazil, Mozambique, Angola, Portugal, Guinea-Bissau, East Timor, Macau, Cape Verde, and São Tomé and Príncipe all have Portuguese as an official language without having Spanish as an official language.
The official language in most of Central America is Spanish.
Cuba is the only Caribbean country that has Spanish as an official language. Puerto Rico has Spanish and English as official language, but it is a U.S. Commonwealth. The Dominican Republic also speaks Spanish, but does not have it as their official language.
No, Guyana is the only in South America that has English as the official language of the country. Save
Yes, Chile is a Spanish speaking country of South America.
Portuguese is the official language of Brazil. Brazil is the only South American country not to have Spanish as its official language.
Well, there aren't whole continents that speak Spanish as their official language. Almost all of South America has Spanish as their official language, except for Brazil, which speaks Portuguese. Parts of Africa speak Spanish, Spain obviously, and then Mexico.
If you mean central North America then it would be English, but if you mean central South America, and Brazil is the most central to the country then I would suggest language of Brazil or even Spanish.