No. It's a country.
South Africa is a country in Sub-Saharan Africa.
OF COURSE ITS NOT A LANDFORM A 2 YEAR OLD KNOWS THAT
Continental island
Africa occupies nearly 20.4% of landmass with 30,370,000 Sq. Km area. See the related link below.
Lesotho is entirely encased in South Africa's borders. It is the only country in the world to be inside another country. It has a population of just over 2million and is slightly smaller than Belgium with a total landmass of 30,355km2 (squared). Swaziland appears to indent into South Africa on the North Eastern border but shares a border with Mozambique. With a population of just under 1.2million people, it is slightly smaller than Fiji with a total landmass of 17,364km2 (squared)
In terms of landmass, Africa covers around 30,000,000 sq km and Britain is around 250,000 sq km meaning roughly 120 Britain's would fit into Africa
The Deccan Plateau
The Sahara Desert
Europe, Asia Africa
Eurasia. (Europe and Asia, not counting Africa)
471,445 square miles
471443 Square Miles.
The tropical rain forests in Africa are located in the western and central part of the continent. The rain forest is less than 5 percent of Africa's landmass.
The five largest countries in Africa based on landmass are Algeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sudan, Libya, and Chad.
Europe and Asia are located on the same landmass called Eurasia. Australia and Oceania are also located on the same landmass.
The largest landmass is the entire area of the continents of Europe, Asia and Africa.
5%
South America and Africa
As far as I know, about two thirds of Africa's land mass is in the NORTHERN hemisphere, with the remaining obviously in the south. You could perhaps phrase your question a little differently: Which hemisphere does Africa have most of its land-mass in?