No, most Portuguese people do not speak Spanish. Portuguese and Spanish are two distinct languages, although they are similar because they both belong to the Romance language family.
Most people in Latin America speak either Spanish or Portuguese. Spanish is the dominant language in most countries, with Portuguese being the official language of Brazil.
Spanish and Portuguese.
By definition, Latin Americans speak Spanish, Portuguese and French. Most speak either Spanish or Portuguese.
South America.
Most people in Brazil speak Portuguese because that nation discovered and first populated Brazil..
I think you're confusing Latin America with South America. Most people speak Spanish or Portuguese in South America because Spain and Portugal invaded and colonized the region.However, most people of "Latin" America speak either Spanish or Portuguese because that's pretty much the definition of Latin America: any American country where a Romance language is spoken, such as Spanish or Portuguese.
Brazilians speak portuguese and not spanish.
Most speak Spanish but one can find Peruvians who speak Portuguese near the border and in big cities.Most people from Peru speak Spanish. A number of Indian Languages are spoken there.no
No, we don't speak Spanish. Brazil official language is Portuguese. All people talk Portuguese except for indigenous people. Spanish for us is a foreign language that we have to learn like people in the U.S do but in the U.S there are a lot that people whose first language is Spanish, here is not like that. On the other hand most people that speak Portuguese can understand Spanish easily and vice versa. So usually we don't learn Spanish as our second language. We study English instead.
Hispanic people speak various languages, with Spanish being the most common. Other languages spoken by Hispanic individuals include Portuguese, English, and indigenous languages such as Nahuatl and Quechua.
Spanish is spoken by more people worldwide than Portuguese. Spanish is the second most spoken language in the world, with around 460 million speakers, while Portuguese is spoken by around 220 million people.
No, there are many different languages spoken in South America. While Spanish may be the official language of most South American countries. Brazilian Portuguese is the most commonly-spoken language on the continent. Portuguese, Spanish, French, Quechua, Aymara, Guaraní, Italian, English, German, Dutch, Japanese and many more are other languages spoken in South America.