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  1. U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved June 12, 2008. [There were 39.5 million Hispanic and Latino Americans aged 5 or more in 2006. 8.5 million of them, or 22%, spoke only English at home, and another 156,000, or 0.4%, spoke neither English nor Spanish at home. The other 30.8 million, or 78%, spoke Spanish at home.

  2. P:LA. Latin America is a collective region of the Americas where Romance languages —languages derived from Latin —are predominantly spoken. The term was coined in France in the mid-19th century to refer to regions in the Americas that were ruled by the Spanish, Portuguese, and French empires. The term does not have a precise definition, but ...

  3. Martinique. Puerto Rico. Saint-Barthélemy. Saint-Martin. This article was most recently revised and updated by John M. Cunningham. Latin America is generally understood to consist of the entire continent of South America in addition to Mexico, Central America, and the islands of the Caribbean whose inhabitants speak a Romance language.

  4. 019 – Americas. 001 – World. Latin America is the part of the Americas where the people speak Romance languages: Spanish or Portuguese. This includes most of South America and Central America (also including the Spanish-speaking and sometimes the French-speaking Caribbean islands). The places in the Americas which speak French ( Haiti ...

  5. Super regions. The regions used in the Vision Atlas are based on the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) regional classification system. GBD created super regions based on two criteria: epidemiological similarity and geographic closeness. For example, the High Income region covers a group of 34 countries in different parts of the world.

  6. Latin America and the Caribbean‎ (3 C, 43 P) N. North America‎ (18 C, 10 P) R. Regions of the Caribbean‎ (4 C, 10 P) S. South America‎ (17 C, 11 P) W.

  7. The Pacific Pumas, a political and economic grouping of countries along Latin America's Pacific coast that includes Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Peru. The term references the four larger Pacific Latin American emerging markets that share common trends of positive growth, stable macroeconomic foundations, improved governance and an openness to global integration.