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.
All countries in South America speak Spanish except Belize, Brazil, French Guyana, the Falkland Islands, and Suriname.
And the majority of Brazilians can understand Spanish, to some degree.
Mainly Spanish, although there are numerous native languages also.
Most South American countries speak Spanish. Brazil is the largest country in South America and Portuguese is their primary language. Making them the largest non Spanish language group in South America
We [argentinians] live in Latin America. We don't speak Latin. We speak spanish =) And some people (as me) speak English also Ethnic groups: white (mostly Spanish and Italian) 97%, mestizo (mixed white and Amerindian ancestry), Amerindian, or other non-white groups 3%
Because part of South America, Brazil, was colonized by the Portugese.
BRAZILBrazilSurinameFrench GuianaGuyanaThe Falkland Islands
South America.
There are significant numbers of spanish speakers on every continent except Australia and Antarctica.
Mainly Spanish, although there are numerous native languages also.
People in Central America do not speak Portuguese; they predominantly speak Spanish. Portuguese is spoken in Brazil, which is in South America. The confusion may arise from the fact that both Portuguese and Spanish are Romance languages and share some similarities.
A majority of the people in Central America and South America speak Spanish today
most people in Latin America are Roman Catholic
Central and South America were conquered by Spain a country which speaks Spanish. However Brazil, was settled by Portugal and so Portuguese is spoken there.
Around 210 million people speak Spanish in South America. It is the official language in most countries on the continent, with the highest number of speakers in countries such as Brazil, Colombia, and Argentina.
They speak Portuguese in Brazil.
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.
In Spain or in all countries in South America. In Spain or in all countries in South America.