When and where you grew up and how continent was defined will change this. It ranges from 4-7 IIRC based on where you grew up. There are some good YouTube videos on the subject that shows, however you want to measure it, there are issues with consistency.
It does depend on how you define a continent, and whether you’re talking colloquially or in a specific formal system.
Then again, I suck at Spanish and never get a chance to use what little I have, so I’m going off of what I’ve been told by native Spanish speakers from the Americas.
Might be a cultural difference. Continents are mostly cultural constructs, which is why most people don’t consider Afro-Eurasia a continent, even though it’s a continuous landmass.
Given that Spain had a lot of colonies in South-America and that Columbus’ voyage that led to the “discovery” of the Americas (more concretely, parts that are currently considered part of South or Central America) was funded by the Spanish crown, I can imagine that Spanish-speakers may have a different view on “America” compared to northern Europeans and their diaspora.
Wait, isn’t Central America its own continent???
But anyway. In Spanish, there is only one continent: América. Or so I was taught. Has this changed?
When and where you grew up and how continent was defined will change this. It ranges from 4-7 IIRC based on where you grew up. There are some good YouTube videos on the subject that shows, however you want to measure it, there are issues with consistency.
It does depend on how you define a continent, and whether you’re talking colloquially or in a specific formal system.
Then again, I suck at Spanish and never get a chance to use what little I have, so I’m going off of what I’ve been told by native Spanish speakers from the Americas.
Might be a cultural difference. Continents are mostly cultural constructs, which is why most people don’t consider Afro-Eurasia a continent, even though it’s a continuous landmass.
Given that Spain had a lot of colonies in South-America and that Columbus’ voyage that led to the “discovery” of the Americas (more concretely, parts that are currently considered part of South or Central America) was funded by the Spanish crown, I can imagine that Spanish-speakers may have a different view on “America” compared to northern Europeans and their diaspora.
Central america is not it’s own continent , there’s only 7 continents.
In Spanish you have: America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Antarctica and Oceania.
With North and South America, you have seven in English. Neat!