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Buenos Aires (English: Fair Winds, originally Ciudad de la Santísima Trinidad y Puerto de Santa María de los Buenos Aires, City of the Holy Trinity and Port of Saint Mary of the Fair Winds) is the capital of Argentina and its largest city and port, as well as one of the largest cities in Latin America and the world. Buenos Aires is located on the southern shore of the Río de la Plata, on the southeastern coast of the South American continent, opposite Colonia del Sacramento, Uruguay. Buenos Aires is located at 34°40′S 58°24′W (-34.667, -58.40).

After the internal conflicts of the 19th century, Buenos Aires was federalised and removed from Buenos Aires Province; its city limits were enlarged to include the former towns of Belgrano and Flores (both are now neighbourhoods in the city).

Argentines sometimes refer to the city as Capital Federal to differentiate the city from the province of the same name. In the 1994 constitution, it was declared an Autonomous City (hence the formal denomination Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires).

Buenos Aires was home for Argentine writers Jorge Luis Borges, Adolfo Bioy Casares, Ernesto Sábato and Victoria Ocampo. Writer Julio Cortázar, who was born in Brussels, lived for a long period in Buenos Aires, before relocating to France where he died. International figures who lived in Buenos Aires include artists René Goscinny, Marcel Duchamp, Witold Gombrowicz, Jerry Masucci, and businessmen John S. Reed and Aristotle Onassis.

During the Spanish Civil War and in its aftermath, Buenos Aires provided refuge for many, including philosopher José Ortega y Gasset.

The University of Buenos Aires, which still remains one of the top learning institutions in South America, has produced five Nobel Prize winners and provides free education for students from all around the globe.

For much of the 20th century, Buenos Aires was the cultural capital of the Spanish-speaking world, and many porteños flaunted their riches abroad (for example, famed New York nightclub El Morocco was owned by a porteño playboy). This gave birth to a stereotype of Argentines as vain and arrogant that became widespread across Latin America; some (especially Uruguayans) make the distinction between porteños and provincianos (people from the provinces), who are excluded from this characterization.