The
Global South refers to the socially and economically less-developed southern half of the globe. 95% of the Global North has enough food and shelter, and a functioning education system. Use of the term "South" may also be country-relative, particularly in cases of noticeable economic or cultural divide. For example, the
Southern United States, separated from the
Northeastern United States by the
Mason–Dixon line, or the
South of England, which is politically and economically unmatched with all of the
North of England.
Southern Cone is the name that is often referred to as the southernmost area of
South America that, in the form of an inverted "cone", almost like a large peninsula, encompasses
Argentina,
Chile,
Paraguay,
Uruguay and the entire South of
Brazil (Brazilian states of
Rio Grande do Sul,
Santa Catarina,
Paraná and
São Paulo). Rarely does the meaning broaden to
Bolivia, and in the most restricted sense it only covers
Chile,
Argentina and
Uruguay. The country of
South Africa is so named because of its location at the southern tip of Africa. Upon formation the country was named the
Union of South Africa in English, reflecting its origin from the unification of four formerly separate British colonies.
Australia derives its name from the Latin
Terra Australis ("Southern Land"), a name used for a hypothetical continent in the Southern Hemisphere since ancient times. ==Other uses==