Portuguese Language Blog
Menu
Search

Archive by Author

Proclamação da República Posted by on Nov 15, 2007

On this very day – November 15th – in 1889, Brazil marked its transition from a monarchy to a republic. The event was triggered by a coup d’état or golpe de estado conducted by Brazilian army units under the direction of Deodoro da Fonseca. The coup ousted Dom Pedro II and ended the rule of…

Continue Reading

Samba School: Mocidade Independente de Padre Miguel Posted by on Nov 13, 2007

There are over a dozen major samba schools (escolas de samba) in Rio de Janeiro. G.R.E.S. Mocidade Independente de Padre Miguel is a terrific example of one of the major schools. Located in Samba City near downtown, Mocidade grew out of not a samba school, but in fact a local soccer team: A escola…

Continue Reading

Swim the amazon in 66 Days! Posted by on Nov 12, 2007

…or just let this guy do it. Martin Strel is a world-class swimmer with a zeal for breaking records. Already having broken many Guinness World Records for distance swimming, including swimming the Adriatic Sea, the Mediterranean Sea, the Danube River and the Mississippi River, Stel decided to attempt the unthinkable: swim the entire Amazin river…

Continue Reading

English Experts Posted by on Nov 8, 2007

This really fantastic blog for Brazilians learning English is quickly gaining steam. Over the past few months I have gotten to know (and respect) Alessandro Brandão, the publisher of English Experts. English Experts has been around for over a year, and as of late has been receiving much praise in the online community. Alessandro was…

Continue Reading

Portuguese Treebank Posted by on Nov 8, 2007

Here’s one for the linguistics enthusiasts out there! A treebank, according to Wiki… …is a text corpus in which each sentence has been annotated with syntactic structure. Syntactic structure is commonly represented as a tree structure, hence the name treebank. Treebanks can be used in corpus linguistics for studying syntactic phenomena or in computational linguistics…

Continue Reading

Obrigado Posted by on Nov 7, 2007

Obrigado means thank you in Portuguese. The first word many people learn in Portuguese, obrigado is certainly extremely useful. Since the word is the past participle of the verb obrigar, it is necessary to use the appropriate gender of the word. Males should say obrigado and females ought to use obrigada. As one might imagine…

Continue Reading

False Friend: “Advertência” Posted by on Nov 6, 2007

Advertência does not mean Advertisement The word advertência actually means warning in Portuguese. In order to say advertisement, use either anúncio or propaganda.

Older posts
Newer posts