This is a bit of a silly one. Notes down at the bottom. Thanks again ThisCatIsConfused for correcting it (and having the patience to read my silly word games!)
Abbabo de ver um filme baseado nas músicas de aca. Hum… Quero dizer “Acabo de ver um filme baseado nas músicas de ABBA”. O seu título é Mamma Mia. A minha filha e a sua amiga fizeram uma festa ontem à noite. Abbastecemo-las… Hum… Ou seja Abastecemo-las com petiscos e abbandonámo-las… Abandonámo-las na sala de estar. Hoje de manhã estão com sono e estão só capazes de comer panquecas com xarope e ver filmes.
Abbasar de ser…. Hum… Apesar de ser de sexo masculino*, gosto do filme. Há muitas estrelas no elenco. Acima de todos, gosto de Christine Baranski que é abbasolutamente… Hum… absolutamente fantastica. O enredo é engraçado, e as canções… Tipo… Quem não abbora ada… Ou seja quem. Não adora ABBA?
*=i just wrote “apesar de ser masculino but you have to say” de sexo masculino”. Probably would have been easier to say “apesar de ser homem” really, eh?
So what’s the joke?
I’d better explain for the benefit of anyone who is confused by the unfamiliar vocabulary that this is a sort of long-running pun: I’ve swapped the word “abba” onto other similar words like “apesar”, “acabo” and “abandonámos” and occasionally swapped letters in the other direction too. In each case, I correct myself immediately after but if you’re still at an early stage of your journey it probably looks a bit confusing so I’m sorry about that!
Practice text with notes. Thanks again, Dani, for the help
Quando comecei a aprender português há muitos anos, pus-me a memorizar as conjugações de verbos, e as regras e uma pilha de cartas de vocabulário. Este método é mais ou menos o mesmo que usámos na escola quando eu e os meus colegas da escola da escola aprendemos francês. Mas infelizmente é uma grande seca. Fiquei farto de flexões! Não fui capaz* de superar o obstáculo de aborrecimento, portanto não consegui aprender assim tanto. Mais tarde, decidi assumir um comprimisso**: “aprender português ou morrer na tentativa!” Comecei a ter aulas com uma professora aqui em Londres mas só mais tarde, quando ouvi um CD “Português com Michel Thomas” e depois li o livro do Benny Lewis***, cheguei a um nível de competência mais alto através de “Language Hacking”. Leio livros, vejo vídeos de Booktube português, oiço músicas… É mais divertido e por isso é mais provável que não desista!
*=não ser capaz, meaning “to be incapable” always seems like an unwieldy way of saying you can’t do something so in usually go for “não consigo” or “não posso” but it’s often a more natural way of saying it.
**=I wrote “fazer um compromisso” (make a compromise) but “assumir” is the better verb to use
***=I’m not sure if I’ve mentioned this book before even when I wrote a whole blog post defending him from some guy who criticised him a couple of years back, but it’s good stuff. I think the idea of language hacking is pretty mainstream these days, but if you haven’t already come across it, that’s a pretty good place to start.
Annotated text about getting vaccinated with some notes at the bottom. Thanks ThisCatIsConfused for the corrections
Eu e a minha esposa estamos na fila fora do centro de lazer*. Estamos à espera da segunda dose da vacina contra covid 19. Ficamos muito contente por finalmente estarmos** protegidos do vírus que causou tanto transtorno durante o último ano e meio. Há quem tem*** dúvidas, ou até desconfia das**** vacinas por causa de falta de entendimento da ciência e isso é compreensível mas errado! Claro está que esta situação apanhou os nossos governos mal preparados. Ninguém no oeste previu esta doença embora muitos cientistas tivessem avisado que uma pandemia é sempre um risco neste mundo de trânsito aéreo e fronteiras abertas.
Ainda que tenhamos falhado completamente neste primeiro teste, ao menos os cientistas reagiram sem hesitação e os serviços de saúde, com ajuda dum exército de voluntários***** conseguiram aceitar o desafio de lidar com os problemas logísticos causados pela necessidade de colocar duas dozes da vacina em cada braço esquerdo em cada país!
*=the correction changes this to Centro de Saúde, which makes sense, but it actually was a leisure centre! Weird but true!
**=I wrote sermos because we’re permanently (?) protected. Bad Call!
***=”há quem” is one of those phrases that I always want to pluralise. “There are those who have doubts” sounds like it refers to many people but in Portuguese it’s “há quem tem dúvidas” as if it was just one person or if that mass of people were acting as a unit.
****=my natural inclination was to write this as “desconfiar a vacina” (distrust the vaccine) or maybe “desconfiar na vacina” (lack trust IN the vaccine) but the correct way is “desconfiar da vacina” (distrust OF the vaccine) which ties back to previous remarks bout differences between PT and EN uses of prepositions…
*****=I did wonder if “An army of volunteers” would be an expression in Portuguese, but the corrector seemed to know what I was talking about so that’s OK. It’s intuitive enough, I guess.
Quick review of this one. As it says in the text, you can enjoy the repetitive use of the imperfect subjunctive and call it homework for the B2 exam. It’s pretty basic apart from that though because it’s a children’s book.
Este livro fala da leitura. Repete-se em cada página a frase “se eu fosse um livro…” e logo a seguir um desejo que um livro poderia sentir. Muitas vezes este desejo é uma dica para os leitores de como apreciar livros ao máximo, tal como “…não gostava que me lessem só por obrigação, ou por estar na moda”
É divertido e ainda por cima, pode ser útil para quem quiser praticar os tempos verbais conjuntivos 🙂
Summary of an article in Observador with notes at the bottom
Este artigo no site do jornal Observador lembra-nos que determinadas temas surgem em todas as sociedades modernas hoje em dia. Há quem prestam atenção às letras de cancões infantis e detetam os traços de um passado mais cruel que a presente. O artigo fala destes traços sob a rubrica de “politicamente incorreto” mas para ser mais exato, as letras contêm referencias a violência domestica, crueldade para com os animais* e racismo. Há muitos exemplos no artigo, alguns triviais (tal como “atirei o pau ao gato”) e alguns mais nojentos.
Claro que cancões, rimas e brincadeiras que fazem parte da cultura de cada pais contém ecoas de uma época menos simpática e não queremos reforçar a opinião que assedio contra mulheres é aceitável por exemplo. E é evidente que qualquer professor de pré-escola que ensinasse aos alunos aquela lengalenga** sobre “o preto do Guiné” perderia o emprego e poucas pessoas sentiria simpatia nenhuma. Isso não se trata de uma questão de o que é que é politicamente correto, nem de censura, nem até de branqueamento*** mas sim de não repetir os insultos do passado nas orelhas dos estudantes negros em 2021.
Mas por outro lado, as tentativas bem-intencionadas para tornar as letras mais aceitáveis dá frequentemente em cancões pirosas e sem esforço. Até certo ponto, um bocadinho de choque, um pedaço de horror nos nossos contos de fada e nas cancões não magoa ninguém. Isso do gato não vão tornar ninguém psicopata, e não é preciso entrar em pânico ma afinal concordo com Dora Batalim: “mais vale não a cantarem, têm muitas por onde escolher”, ou seja, estas rimas racistas merecem desbotar e desaparecer. Não precisamos deles.
*=”crueldade para com os animais” is an interesting contruction. There are two prepositions in there. Literally, it would be “cruelty for with the animals”, which sounds weird to anglophone ears, but does seem to be legit. A bit of research and a question on a r/Portuguese shows that it’s a prepositional phrase meaning “in relation to” – Ciberdúvidas article here. It appears in the wikipedia article about cruelty but the main title of the article is just “Crueldade Com Animais” so obviously both make sense. By the way, it’s worth noting that brazilians spell “pára” (meaning “stop”) without the accent and in theory portuguese people should spell it that way too now, but it’s the most-ignored aspect of the Acordo Ortográfico because it’s so confusing. However, you might come across a phrase like “para com isso” which means “stop that”, so try not to get confused if you do!
**=I struggle to come up with a good translation for “lengalenga”. I’ve seen it explained as a kind of rhyming mnemonic, but I don’t think it’s that: it seems to refer to repetitive chants like rhymes that aren’t quite nursery rhymes – like “ip dip sky blue, it is not you” or “i see England, I see France, I see Colin’s underpants”. That kind of thing, I believe.
***=hm, branqueamento = whitewashing or sanitising something but in the context of imposing racist songs on black students it sounds like a pun which wasn’t my intention when I wrote it
OK, so if you’re a new learner, you’ve probably come across a few explanations of how gender works in Portuguese, and how to work out if a given word is masculine or feminine just by looking at it. Different teachers have slightly different rules so I sat down to road-test them and see which versions were reliable and which had so many exceptions that they weren’t worth bothering with. I used a list of the 1000 most popular portuguese nouns (details in Appendix 3 below) and used excel formulae to see what rule *should* apply vs what gender it actually has.
This third version of the list has some new refinements for nouns ending in -ão. As you know they are very variable. I usually hear abstract nouns are feminine and concrete nouns are masculine but that’s a bit vague and there are lots of exceptions. But then I came across a video where some guy (I wish I could remember who so I could credit him!) said the thing to do is to look at the letter immediately before the -ão. Verbs ending -ção, -são and to a lesser extent -ião are the ones that are treated as abstract and feminine. They tend to be similar to english words ending -tion or -sion. The rest are manly and butch. Once you split the rule like this, it makes more sense and there are very few exceptions. So… I’ve updated the table below
Portuguese Noun Genders – All The Rules I Know
More specific rules nearer the top override more general ones further down. So for example, “dezena” is masculine because it meets the “all numbers are masculine” rule even though it ends in A. And Avó is feminine because it meets the “Male and Female people” rule even though it ends in an O. Sorry about the colour-scheme, but… well, you know… just trying to harness my cultural stereotypes in a way that makes it easier to follow.
Rule
Examples
Exceptions
Dependent:
Male and Female animals/people depend on individual’s sex*
o touro / a vaca
o irmão / a irmã
o dirigente/a dirigente
o autor, a autora
o rapaz
o socialista, a socialista
o jesuíta
o chefe
Dependent:
Ordinal numbers depend what’s being counted, because they are effectively adjectives!
o primeiro (dia)
a segunda (noite)
Masculine:
Nouns ending in
-o (but not -ão though)
-r
-l
-z
-u
o lugar
o amigo
o chapéu
o papel
o final
a tribo
a dor
a cor
a flor
Masculine:
Names of Lakes, Rivers, Mountains etc
o Tejo
os Himalaias
o Brasil
o Atlântico
o Tamisa (despite the -a ending!)
Masculine:
Compass points
O Leste
O Oeste
O Norte
O Sul
Masculine:
Car brands** & types of wines
o Madeira
o Ferrari
a Mercedes (but only the brand. The car is “um Mercedes”)
Variable:
The seasons obey their last letter rules o=masculine, a=feminine
o verão
o inverno
o outono
a primavera
Variable:
Week days obey their last letter rules o=masculine, a=feminine
o sábado
o domingo
a segunda feira
a terça feira
Masculine:
Words from greek, usually ending -a: most usually in
-ema
-grama
-eta
a acção
a actuação
a administração
a alteração
a aplicação
a aprovação
a associação
a atenção
a avaliação
a canção
a classificação
a colecção
a comissão
a competição
a composição
a comunicação
a concepção
a conclusão
a condição
a constituição
a construção
a criação
a decisão
a declaração
a definição
a designação
a dimensão
a direcção
a discussão
a disposição
a distribuição
a divisão
a edição
a educação
a eleição
a emoção
a estação
a evolução
a excepção
a expansão
a explicação
a exploração
a exportação
a exposição
a expressão
a extensão
a federação
a formação
a função
a fundação
a geração
a impressão
a inflação
a informação
a instalação
a instituição
a intenção
a interpretação
a intervenção
a investigação
a ligação
a manifestação
a missão
a nação
a negociação
a obrigação
a observação
a ocasião
a opção
a operação
a opinião
a oposição
a organização
a orientação
a paixão
a participação
a população
a posição
a preocupação
a pressão
a prisão
a privatização
a produção
a profissão
a protecção
a publicação
a reacção
a realização
a redução
a região
a relação
a religião
a representação
a resolução
a reunião
a revisão
a revolução
a secção
a selecção
a sensação
a sessão
a situação
a solução
a televisão
a tradição
a transformação
a união
a utilização
a variação
a versão
a visão
a votação
o apresentação
o avião
o coração
Masculine:
Other words ending in
-ão
o alcatrão
o algodão
o balcão
o cão
o capitão
o cartão
o chão
o cidadão
o escaldão
o feijão
o órgão
o padrão
o pão
o patrão
a gestão
a mão
a questão
a razão
Feminine:
Most words ending in
-a
a dúvida
a água
a palavra
a terra
o clima
o dia
(likely also greek)
Feminine:
Words ending in -ez
a estupidez
a gravidez
a viuvez
a surdez
a vez
Feminine:
Words ending
-dade
-ie
-tude
-gem
-ice
-ã
a cidade
a viagem
a garagem
a juventude
a espécie
a velhice
o índice
Feminine:
Names of towns & countries
A Madeira
A Rússia
A França
A Suiça
A Islândia
Londres
Places specifically named after male things:
O Rio de Janeiro
O Porto
Places consisting of a male noun + adjective
O Reino Unido
Os Estados Unidos
Feminine:
Names of the Academic Arts and Science subjects
a medicina
a matemática
a biologia
a física
a geografia
*=Note that some of these change their endings but some – like dirigente, cientista, keep the same ending.
**= Jeremy Clarkson would love this, I’m sure
Appendix 1: Not-So-Easy E
Some teachers say that nouns ending in E are split between abstract and concrete. However, as you can see, contrary to the textbook rule, it’s mixed pretty evenly on both sides. Conclusion: the rule is bollocks, I’m afraid, and we’ll just have to learn these the hard way.
Masculine
Feminine
In theory, these should all be concrete (things you can see and touch)
In theory these should all be abstract (ideas, emotions)
o acidente
o ambiente
o ataque
o barrete
o breve
o clube
o combate
o continente
o controle
o corte
o costume
o crime
o debate
o dente
o destaque
o empate
o exame
o filme
o gabinete
o golpe
o horizonte
o instante
o interesse
o legume
o leite
o limite
o mestre
o monte
o nome
o nordeste
o padre
o parque
o peixe
o príncipe
o regime
o romance
o sangue
o telefone
o teste
o transporte
o vale
o volume
a análise
a arte
a árvore
a ave
a base
a carne
a chave
a classe
a corte
a crise
a estante
a face
a fase
a fome
a fonte
a frase
a frente
a gente
a gripe
a hipótese
a mãe
a metade
a morte
a noite
a parede
a parte
a pele
a ponte
a posse
a rede
a saúde
a sede
a sorte
a tarde
a torre
a vontade
(NB Corte appears in both sides because it can mean either “The court” or “The cut”, both reasonably common but having differing genders just to be bloody awkward)
Apprendix 2: Mistakes, Mis-Shapes, Misfits
When I’d counted all the words that fit the rules and the exceptions, there was a short list left over of words that met none of the rules. The majority seem to be masculine, apart from fé, lei, ordem and nuvem.
a fé
o fim
o gás
o jardim
a lei
o mês
a nuvem
a ordem
o país
o pé
o som
o tom
Appendix 3: the List of 1000 Most-used Portuguese Words
I got the list from a site called Hackingportuguese but I took out a couple of words that I saw that were Brazil-specific and a couple that looked like they were (at least in European Portuguese) only used as adjectives, and replaced them with random nouns from a Memrise deck, to bulk it up to a thousand again. I subjected the survivors to extreme torture in an excel spreadsheet in order to see how many exceptions there were, using Excel formulae to check the ending against the supposed rule. My version of the list is available as a spreadsheet here in case you want to play with it and check my work.
I’ve been thinking about the evolution of this blog. I originally started it as a sort of homework notepad where I would re-type texts that had been corrected, as a way of helping the lessons would stick in what I call my memory, but that’s less relevant these days, and the point of the blog was getting lost, especially since I have been learning other languages like Scots Gaelic which has been a bit confusing, I think.
So from now on I’m going to make it a bit more outward-facing, try and include more reviews of Portuguese resources and when I do include whole texts written in portuguese, try and explain what’s going on a bit more. I’ll be adding more and more resource pages listing useful Portuguese learning resources on the menu on the right hand side of the page too. Obviously I’m not a teacher, not even a native speaker, I’m just a student. If you’re reading this, I guess you are too. I think we students can probably help each other find good teachers, good videos, point out each other’s mistakes and generally motivate each other to be better at our chosen language.
An Invitation
So here’s an invitation: I write a lot of stuff on here but I’m curious to know who is reading it and what they like. I’d love to hear from you. I’d love it if you dropped a note in the comment section below 👇, saying what kind of thing you’d like to see on here. Or maybe go and find something you like on another page of the site and tell me about it. Is it the sort of thing you’d like to see more of? Less of? Have I made any egregious screw-ups? Should I convert the site to a knitting blog?
Antes de mais, vamos falar deste livro como objecto em si: é muito agradável. As cores da sobrecapa, o formato, o tamanho, o peso do livro nas mãos. Todos estes aspectos, combinados, dão para satisfazer o leitor.
Quanto os conteúdos, o livro trata-se dum coligação de vários pensamentos, curiosidades e factos sobre a leitura. Para nós que gostamos de ler livros sobre livros, é muito interessante. Mimamo-nos com mais um capítulo curto e mais uma anecdota. É divertido, sem dúvida, mas fiquei aliviado quando cheguei ao fim. Mais que cem-e-tal páginas seria uma indulgência. Já chega. De volta aos romances.
My favourite bookshop Bertrand, runs online classes as a sideline, covering history, philosophy, creative writing and other topics of general interest. These are obviously aimed at native speakers, not learners, but I can understand Portuguese pretty well, so I thought I’d give it a go and hope not to embarrass myself by doing anything too stupid. I selected “Portuguese Para Todos” (Portuguese For All) which is given by Marco Neves, a blogger and author of books about the Portuguese Language such as “Doze Segredos Da Língua Portuguesa” which I read a couple of years ago and summarised in a series of posts at the time. He knows his stuff and expresses himself very clearly. The course tries to help people level up their language game so that they can be more persuasive, interesting writers. He points out that this is especially important in the age of the internet when a lot of us are communicating in written format without an editor as a matter of routine. The format is a series of videos, with a new section released each weekday for students to view on demand and there are a few short quizzes to check your understanding (I am embarrassed at how low my scores were, I’m afraid!)
I’m going to use this post as a summary of the course, partly as a memory aid for myself and also as a review for the benefit of anyone who might be intereted in doing the same kind of course. We’re all on this language-learning jounrney together so we might as well help each other out and learn from each other’s experiences. I’ll try and avoid giving too much detail here though of course, since I don’t want to give away any spoilers on a commercially available product. If you think you’d benefit from the course, it’s only about forty quid, so get on it next time it’s presented! (Just to reiterate though, this is emphatically NOT a course aimed at new learners. Although he speaks very clearly, the material is such that you won’t even know what he’s talking about unless you’re at intermediate level or above)
Part 1 – Grammar, Errors and Myths of Portuguese
What is grammar? Grammar is the collection of habits of native speakers. Everyone has one in their heads, and even if we encounter an unknown word, so long as the basic grammar is intact we can still recognise it as a valid sentence and usually make a reasonable stab at the meaning of the word as a result. If the grammar vreaks down, on the other hand, we might struggle to even recognise the text as an example of the language.
Common annoying errors. I won’t list them all. I did a review summary of a book called 101 Erros de Português que Acabam Com a Sua Credibilidade a while ago, which covered a lot of the same ground, and I listed the main topics of interest to non-native speakers, but it’s like “Eats, Shoots and Leaves”, A lot of the mistakes are just errors of laziness or over-familiarity that are more likely to be made by a native speaker (think “they’re” and “their” in english, for example) than by someone who is coming to the language as a foreigner, learning the rules from a book. The most surprising example to an english reader is a false error: he says a lot of people will correct the phrase “Não há nada” (literally “there isn’t nothing”) because it’s a double negative. Now, in english this would definitely be an error and it would cause most educated british people to downgrade their estimation of the speaker’s intelligence by about 50% automatically but it is perfectly legitimate in portuguese. In fact, it’s correct. You can’t even say “Há nada” because you need both words to construct the negative statement. From what little Spanish I know, I think they are even more extreme and the rule seems to be that the more negatives you can squeeze into a sentence the more emphatically negative it becomes but Portuguese is a little less painful to english ears!
Part 1 (Extra)
In an extra session at the end, he lists some problems with autocorrect in MS Word. I don’t actually use MS Word in Portuguese, so I skimmed it, but I think we know Word isn’t perfect and has a lot of blind spots. Essentially, the problems with it in PT-PT are the same as the problems with it in EN-GB with the added complication that in addition to selecting the right dialect, you also have the option of configuring it to use or to ignore the Acordo Ortográfico, or some mixture of both forms. He gives quite a lot of detail here, and shows screen recordings of how to change settings to make Word more helpful.
If you use Word a lot for your Portuguese writing, this section alone might justify the price of the course!
Part 2 – How Does the Portuguese Language Work?
Poor Hades
More examples of annoying errors. These ones are mainly related to verbs, and especially uses and misuses of the verb haver. I made a joke I was very proud of about “há-des” and posted it on Instagram like a big dufus. So far nobody has told me what a comic genius I am so either it is embarrassingly ungrammatical or else nobody shares my sense of humour.
Words as building-blocks of language. He breaks down words into fixed types (numbers, conjunctions etc that don’t change their endings) and variable types like verbs and nouns that do. He then shows how the “sentence construction mechanism” turns these words into whole sentences. He does this at a pretty high level that a native speaker would understand, and it’s interesting for a relatively advanced leaerner to see how he describes it in a way that is far removed from how we foreigners might learn it from books.
There are examples of long, complex sentences from the classic novel “Os Maias” by Eça de Queirós where the conjugation of the verb can trip up a writer, simply because there are many words between the subject and the verb, so when you get there you’ve lost track of what form it should have “Os Casas onde [long, rambling clause stretching over multiple lines]… mantém-se na minha memoria”. You occasionally see people make this kind of error in english too, when the noun and verb get separated. For example, I’ve just been listening to a podcast about the Jersey fishing kerfuffle and the presenter said “There has to be somemethod of resolving these disputes that don’t involve gunboats“. The verb refers to the singular “method” but because the word “disputes comes right before it he has used “don’t” instead of “doesn’t”. Tut tut, low standards at the Spectator!
There’s quite a good section on very complicated gradations in past tense. For example the difference between “O jogo tinha acabado de terminar” (the game had just finished) and “O jogo tinha acabado” (the game had finished). The first one can sometimes seem like an error since “acabar” and “terminar” both mean finish. So if you say “tinha acabado de terminar” it sounds like you’re saying “The game had finished finishing” but it’s perfectly correct. In contrast, my wife tells me that when she used to say “Vou ir ao cinema” (I am going to go to the cinema) her mother would cut her off by saying Se vais, não precisas de ir (If you are going you don’t need to go). In other words, you don’t need to use ir as an auxiliary verb if the main verb is also ir. You would just say “vou ao cinema”
When to use the infinitivo pessoal. It’s good to know portuguese people struggle with this since it baffles the hell out of us. Dudes, surely the whole point of an infinitive is that it isn’t personal an doesn’t change…? He says that sometimes it’s more of a stylistic chocie than a grammatical one. “O mais certo é tu seres o último a saber” (What is most likely is you will be the last to know) has a personal infinitive whereas “Toca a ler” doesn’t. It is definitely wrong if it’s the main verb, used with an auxiliary (Os meus pais acabaram de mudar a casa, not Os meus pais acabaram de mudarem a casa, for example) but the auxiliary verb itself *can* be a personal infinitive (Achei bem de terem mudado a casa, not Achei bem de ter mudado a casa)
Part 3 – Punctuation – Full Stops and Dashes
I think the fact that the AO is quite prescriptive about punctuation maybe means that it gets talked about more in Portugal than in the UK. It’s pretty unusual to see anyone pedantically mocking someone for adding full stops after each letter of U.S.A. for example. The rules are basically the same as in english with a few exceptions
Dot after the number when writing abbreviations of ordinal numbers (first, second etc) 1.o, 2.o, 3.a
Colons are known as “dois pontos”
The dash — or “travessão” — is mosty used as in english. In other words, bung it in anywhere you suspect you might need a colon or a set of brackets or whatever, but you can’t really be bothered to think about it. Unlike in english, it can also be used at the start of a line of dialogue instead of putting the whole line in quotation marks — also known as “aspas”. If using a dash in this way, you would end the paragraph before with a full stop or colon, then put the dash followed by dialogue. If the dialogue ends and, narration is separated off with more dashes:
— It works like this, you see — said Jeeves — but it takes some getting used to!
There are then some points about spacing of words in Word documents, how to use Word formats and so on.
Portuguese uses commas in place of decimal points 5,5 (cinco virgula cinco)
Sometimes but not always, the opposite happens: a dot in place of a comma in thousands: 1.000
You need a space between numbers and units
5 km
5 oC, and even…
5 %
The word “numero” can be abbreviated to n.o
You abbreviate “antes de Cristo” (Portugugese equivalent to BC/Before Christ) as “a. C.” – small a, large C, dots after each and a space between
Part 4: Punctuation – Commas and Other Problems
I don’t think there’s anything here that will surprise an english speaker: the rules are all the same, and they’ll probably get broken at roughly the same rate as we break them in english due to our own prejudices and where we, personally, pause in our own speech, or just through force of habit. He even mentions “virgula de Oxford” and says that the use of commas before and in english is “muito polémica”. Not arf, mate.
In the extra section there are some interesting tidbits that are rules in portuguese but nobody cares about at all in english such as
If you have a phrase in brackets and you need another bracketed phrase inside it you use square brackets inside curved brackets (for example in this phrase [which I have put in brackets] there is another expression nested inside it where I have used square brackets)
Random additions like [sic] also belong in square brackets
Quotation marks (or “aspas”) come in two forms: “aspas altas” (high quotation marks) are what we would normally think of as quotation marks, but «aspas em linha» (in-line quotation marks) are also a thing. The basic uses are similar except that, as discussed above, you can use dashes to indicate speech, which you really, really can’t in english.
Apostrophes are blissfully rare in portuguese. he dispatches the whole subject in less than one minute. You’d be hard-pushed to do it in under an hour if this were a course in english! It would be illustrated with many examples of horrible misuse. People would boo and hiss and throw things at the screen. As in english, they are used for omitted letters, for example in quoted speech where someone has an accent: “meu qu’ido”. You don’t normally need it for merging prepositions into articles de+os=dos, for example, but you very occasionally need to, if the article is part of a book title, for example. If you’re a fan of Eça de Queirós you might want to say “I like Os Maias”, but “Os” is part of the title and you don’t want to cause confusion, so it would go “Gosto d’Os Maias” and that’s really about the only time you need to do that.
Note that in posrtuguese, apóstrofo is the name of the punctuation mark. The word apostrofe exists too but it’s a figure of speech. Specifically, it’s an emphatic invocation, for example “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Me Deus, meu Deus, por que me abandonaste?”)
Part 5: Abbreviations,
This just touches on some points raised in earlier days. In fact, it’s a wierdly short unit, this, and I can’t understand why he didn’t distribute the content more evenly between the sections. Anyway, as in english, an acronym (acrónimo) is like an abbreviation (sigla) but it can be pronounced like a word, such as “OTAN” (what we would call NATO), or “UNICEF”. This is really the entirety of the lessons I learned from section 5!
Part 6: Portuguese in the Office
Here we’re getting into the realms of style. He talks about how to avoid long convoluted sentences, and vagueness. For the most part, this is something, as a learner, that I am less able to control, since I don;t have the grammatical chops to write a long-convoluted sentence even if I wanted to and, on the other hand, don’t have a good ear for what constitutes clear, beautiful portuguese prose. This is probably one for the people at C2 level. I found the third point really interesting and helpful though
Read the sentence out loud to see if it sounds good and conveys the message clearly
Think about the division between setences and the internal structure because you’re not James Joyce, author of Ulysses, so that epic snot green 60-page sentence you wrote explaning the company’s internet usage policy could probably be broken up a bit to make its meaning clearer, say into two thirty-page sentences and all the readers thanking you, the sky opening, the music ringing, as I walk through Dublin out past the villages as the text gets easier and this seems like I good idea yes I said yes I will Yes
Avoid repetition. This seems obvious and we try to avoid it in english too of course but in the example he uses, it isn’t an obvious repetition. He shows a sentence taking place in the past, having “tinha” as an auxiliary verb twice and “que” three times. These kinds of things are quite hard to avoid, given the structure of the grammar, so this seems like a really useful thing to take away from the course. He suggests a way of breaking the sentence up. Unlike in the previous case, this isn’t to avoid lengthy sentences but to avoid overuse of little joining words like que. He also switches up the tenses a little to get rid of the double tinha. Obviously if the repetition is intentional, as in the abovementioned passage from Ulysses, that’s different, but unintentional repetition is often ugly and distracting.
Avoid repetition. This seems obvious and we try to avoid it in english too of course but in the example he uses, it isn’t an obvious repetition. He shows a sentence taking place in the past, having “tinha” as an auxiliary verb twice and “que” three times. These kinds of things are quite hard to avoid, given the structure of the grammar, so this seems like a really useful thing to take away from the course. He suggests a way of breaking the sentence up. Unlike in the previous case, this isn’t to avoid lengthy sentences but to avoid overuse of little joining words like que. He also switches up the tenses a little to get rid of the double tinha. Obviously if the repetition is intentional, as in the abovementioned passage from Ulysses, that’s different, but unintentional repetition is often ugly and distracting. Sorry, this is a silly joke isn’t it
Finally, there’s a shorter section on how to create a good piece of writing: drafting it, editing it and rewriting it. The bulk of the material here is in written format, with the writing serving as an example of good text as well as a piece of instruction.
Part 7: Questions and Traps in the Language #1
This was just a Q&A where people had submitted examples for the teacher to use as models and suggest optimal use of punctuation. I noticed a couple of the people asking the questions had very non-Portuguese names – “Jenny” and “Georgette” – so maybe I wasn’t the only estrangeiro lurking in the audience after all!
For the most part, the questions were to do with when it was OK to bend the rules relating to commas in order to make the meaning clearer, but it was all relating to parts 3, 4 and 5 of the series.
Part 8: Questions and Traps in the Language #2
Miscellaneous questions about orthography. I won’t list them all, but some of the ones I thought were most interesting were:
Use of articles with place names (“topónimos”). Coincidentally, I had been planning to do a post about this anyway, following on from a conversation I had with a former teacher but since I’m here, I’ll just embed it in this post instead
Countries generally take an article when they appear in a sentence – A Russia, O Reino Unido and so on. So it’s “Vivo na Rússia”. I live in the Russia, not I live in Russia
A few countries don’t need one though. He gives two examples but my teacher gives six, which I believe she regards as the complete list: Portugal, Marrocos, Angola, Moçambique, Cuba, Israel. Ele vive em Portugal
And there’s an even smaller list where the article is optional. You can use or omit the article in the following cases Espanha, Itália, França, Inglaterra “Elas vivem em/na França”. Both the course and my teacher give the same list, which is reassuring
Cities don’t take articles at all except in a few cases, usually where the city takes its name from some other geographical feature – so “O Porto” is “The Port”, O Rio de Janeiro is “The River of January”, and so on; so they take articles where they appear in a sentence but Londres, Paris, Lisboa, Preston etc don’t.
He gives one exception for the above, and it’s recognisable to an english speaker. We might say “I have fond memories of the Preston of my youth”, and likewise in portuguese that would be “O Preston da minha adolescencia”
Contractions of prepositions and articles, such as ao, pelo and do. I feel like these are something we pick up quite early as new learners so guess if you are reading this you either know them or know where to find them in your grammar book. He gives some examples of when not to use them – mainly in sentences where the article or pronoun pertains to an infinitive, either on its own or as part of a clause. Um. That’s not very clear is it? Um… let’s see if I can write some examples without copying the ones from the course because it’ll be more of a challenge. The italic phrases don’t get contracted because they refer to an infitive, or a phrase containing an infinitive (highlighted in red) which is sneakily doing the job of an object.
Enterrou o seu pai antes de ele (not “dele”) falecer = “he buried his father before his dying”, which isn’t the traditional way of doing things, I know, but maybe he’s just not very patient
Não gosto de um (not “dum”) livro de segunda mão ter uns cantos dobrados = “I don’t like a second hand book having dog-eared pages”. True dat.
Hm… that’s all he said about this subject. I had a feeling he might be missing some. (Not that I doubt his knowledge, obviously, but there might be some things that are too obvious to say to an audience of native speakers…?) I was sure there was a rule that said you leave the two separate if the number was important – for example in a sentence like “I managed to move all my stuff to the new house in one journey instead of two” seems like it should be “em um” to stress the fact of the number. I can’t find any evidence of such a rule online though so maybe I dreamed it. See this ciberduvidas answer for example
He talks about some less common contractions too, like
Comigo, contigo, convosco and all those contractions of “com” with a personal pronoun
lhas, mo, and other splicings of a direct and an indirect object. If you haven’t come across this sort of abomination yet, wait till you get to B2. Basically, when you say “I gave it to him” the “it” (o) and the “to him” (lhe) get splunged together into “lho”, and there are a few other combinations along the same lines. He thinks these are a bit ugly. He also warns of the danger of confusing things like “mostramos” (we show) with “mostra-mos” (show them to me). Well quite! *reaches for gin and tonic*
Difference between “à-vontade” with a hyphen and “à vontade” without. I’d never heard of the hyphenated version, and when I checked online the first result was someone saying it was invalidated by the Acordo Ortografico but it’s in priberam and that’s good enough for me. With the hyphen it is a noun which means something like “alacrity” or “eagerness”. Without the hyphen it works as an adjective and means something like “at ease” or “in one’s element”, as in the phrase “esteja a vontade” which is roughly equivalent to ” make yourself at home” or “feel free to…”
Cabo-Verdiana not Cabo-Verdeana: important in my house because Mrs L was born there.
Enquanto sometimes appears in the wild as “enquanto que” and it’s not wrong but it’s never obligatory so the takeaway for a non-native speaker is probably just “don’t bother”
Part 9: Questions and Traps in the Language #3
Again , dealing with questions native speakers often get wrong. Some of them won’t be much use but
Modes of address were discussed, and these are often quite confusing because on the whole we are much less formal in the UK and certainly don’t have mjultiple ways of saying “you” depending on who we’re talking to. He sets them out in decreasing order of formality from “Vossa Excelencia” (which is how the consulate usually addresses me!), down through “O senhor doutor”, “O Colin”, “Você” and finally “Tu” as the most informal. The last two pronouns are often omitted entirely and the listener just has to understand that when a person says “estás” they mean “you are” and when they say “está” they probably mean “you are” but could also mean “he is” or “she is” or “it is”, and you just have to get it from the context. What’s confusing about that? :^) In the plural, it’s similar except that tu doesn’t exist and vós appears instead as slightly more formal than vocês but is only used in certain regions of the coutry, not including Lisbon. See, it’s perfectly simple… ha ha ha *weeps*. Anyway, he talks about these at some length, highlighting the different usages in different social situations and regions. In Brazil, of course, all bets are off!
Use of the verb haver seems relevant. Again, I’ll make my own examples rather than copying because it’ll help me remember, but bear in mind I might introduce my own errors, so if you want it from the horse’s mouth, sign up for the course.
Generally, haver does the job of “there are” or “there were” or “there will be”. Há dois gatos na sala de estar” = there are two cats in the living room. In this sense it is roughly synonymous with “existir” except that existir behaves like a normal verb (Existem dois gatos) but haver is always and only third person singular. So: há, havia, podia haver, houve, haverá and so on but never havem, hei, hás, houverem.
Also works in situations where in english we would use “ago”. Há três anos = three years ago. Also in place of “for” when talking about time. Há muito tempo
Haver de (with no hyphen) means “to be obliged to”: Hei de ir a consulta = I have to go the the appointment
Haver-de (with hyphen) is a vaguer way of signaling an intention: “Hei-de visitar os meus pais” is like “I should really visit my parents (at some point)”
It can also be a substitute auxiliary verb instead of ter. “Eu havia gastado todo o meu dinheiro”. Some conjugation websites include this sort of construction, but most don’t.
Verb agreements. Mostly pretty standard stuff but
I did not know that the verb ser can agree with the object instead of the subject in some cases. “The problem is the people who votes for the other candidate” can be “O problema é as pessoas que votaram para o outro candidato” or “O problema são as pessoas que votaram para o outro candidato” . This is because those two things – the problem and the people – are identical to each other: the problem is the people, the people are the problem. Since this is (a) optional and (b) confusing as feck, I suggest you just be aware it exists but not try to use it
Sometimes it’s not always obvious that a singular subject is singular when you are talking about “the majority of people” or “all the people” (toda a gente), so watch out for situations where you refer to a group of people as a collective. This relates back to the point made in part 2.
Where does the pronoun go when it’s the object of the verb?
Usually after the verb, with a hyphen: “diga-me“, “dei-lhe o biscoito” and so on. This position is called ênclise and it is the default way of doing it in european portuguese.
If there is an auxiliary verb, the default method still applies but the pronoun can go after either part of the verb, according to choice: “eu ia-lhe oferecer um lapiz”, or “eu ia oferecer-lhe um lapiz”
In the future or conditional tense, you have to put it in the middle of the verb, directly after the main stem and before the ending, making what is sometimes called a pronoun sandwich. “cantar-lo-ei em voz alta” (I will sing it out loud), “nunca dar-lhe-ia a joia” ( I would never give her the jewel). This is called mesóclise and it is one of the top three most horrifying aspects of european portuguese, and that’s why most people prefer using compound future tenses like “vou-lhe dar um beijinho”
Finally, the pronoun goes in front of the verb in certain very specific contexts. This is called próclise. I can’t explain the uses as well as he can, obviously, so I’ll do it in a simplified way
After “que”: Ele disse que ele te deu um biscoito”
In negative contexts: “Eu nãote prometeu nada”
In co-ordenated phrases like nem… nem… or quer… quer…. To be honest, I don’t even know what you would call this kind of grammatical structure in english but anyway it looks like this: Vou casar-me com Pedro querme permitas quer nao
When the verb appears after certain adverbs such as “talvez”, “apenas” or “só”, for example: “apenasme deu dois biscoitos”
When it appears after prepositions like “para” or “até” or “de”, for example: “antes deo comer, lava os mãos”
When the subject of the verb is a quantifier like “ambos” or “poucos”, for example: “ambosme ignoraram“
When the subject of the verb is “alguém” or “algo”, for example: “alguémme disse que há mais um biscoito no armário” (there’s a bit of a theme here isn’t there?)
The last section in Day 9’s lesson is a run-through of similar words with confusing meanings such as oficial and oficioso, trás and traz. The biggest headache-inducer out of these is the difference between porque and por que, which has come up a few times on this blog, including in the 101 Transgressions post I mentioned earlier
Part 10: How to Write Unforgettable Sentences
The final lesson in the series starts with some examples of “fake news about portuguese”, i.e. situations where wannabe pedants have insisted that certain portuguese phrases should in fact be written in some other way. My favourite was Bicho Carpinteiro (woodworm) which someone had insisted should be “bicho pelo corpo inteiro”, which is pretty good as a description of, say, lice but unless you were Pinnocchio, you couldn’t really get an infestation of bicho carpinteiro pelo corpo inteiro. I was a bit confused by his description since he seemed to be saying children could have woodworm, but it seems to relate to an idiomatic expression “ter bicho carpinteiro” or “estar com bicho carpinteiro” means to be fidgety or hyperctive (in Priberam, “Estar irrequieto; não parar quieto no mesmo lugar.”)
Then he dives into the video “How to Write Unforgettable Sentences” itself. All I can say is it must be easy to be a writer in portuguese because he manages to cover the entire subject in three minutes and thirty one seconds! He does this by examining a paragraph from Civilisation, a short story by Eça de Queirós, looking at the choice of adverbs, differing lengths of sentences, contrasting imagery and explaning how this demonstrates his total mastery of the language. This stuff is all pretty advanced. I’m not sure I could analyse a text in my own language at this level of detail, and obviously I am in no way close to being able to do it in portuguese. This is some proper C2-level content
Conclusion
The conclusion is used to wrap up any remaining participant questions about capitalisation, about the awkward spelling, and about a whole raft of things really. He explains them really well, giving reasons for the choice, getting people to think more about why they do it in a certain way, rather than simply giving the rule. Some of the items I found interesting were:
A question about how to write dialogue that spans multiple paragraphs. I hadn’t really thought about this. As I mentioned in Part 3, sometimes dialogue in portuguese is written using a hyphen at the beginning of the line instead of using speech marks at the beginning and end. So what do you do if the protagonist witters on for ages and his diaogue goes over into a new paragraph? How does the writer know that this is the same character talking and not a reply from someone else, say? The course’s solution for this is to start the speech with a hyphen and then start the next paragraph with a closing quotation mark
— So you start with a dash like this
» And then when you start the new paragraph you continue with the closing part of one of these inline quotes. This looks very odd to my british eyes, I’m afraid, but that’s how it works so I’ll just have to get used to it!
A question about compound verbs – phrases made of a verb and a preposition like “dar para” or “passar por” – that completely change the meaning of the verb. In this video he touches on them briefly, discussing when it is ok to use them in written portuguese, but doesn’t, obviously, go into detail about the meanings of all possible versions because it would take ages. He does advise students (and remember, these are native speakers!) to check a dictionary of the meanings of these compound verbs (here’s a link to the one I use, if you’re interested), because they don’t usually appear in normal dictionaries, simply because they are made up of lmultiple words.
A summary (in text form, not video) of the Acordo Ortográfico. If you don’t know about this, it’s an agreement that came into effect recently to standardise the spelling of the language between its european and brazilian variants. There’s a description of it in english on wikipedia, and even an online translator here that you can use to rid your own texts of any heretical words. Weirdly, there is a disclaimer under the title that says that the explanation doesn’t actually follow the rules of the AO itself! And sure enough, right there in the first paragraph: “O Acordo Ortográfico é um acordo entre oito países de língua oficial portuguesa, com o objectivo de uniformizar a ortografia da língua portuguesa e simplificar algumas das suas regras.” there’s a word that should have lost its C under the new rules.
General thoughts (from me) about the whole course
All in all, I really enjoyed the course and found myself looking forward to each new video dropping. It’s very clear. I didn’t find myself needing to rewind and listen again as I sometimes have to on Youtube, for example. He obviously really likes the language and cares about it being used well, but he isn’t pedantic, he just likes clarity.
The distribution of videos was a bit strange and didn’t seem well thought-through. Firtly on duration: why are there only three minutes and twenty seconds on day 3 but about an hour on day 1? Could it not have been evened out a bit so that we get – say – twenty to thirty minutes a day? Then there’s the way topics were grouped together. Things that seemed to belong together were widely spaced in time. OK, I know in some cases that was because he was allowing student questions to dictate some of the lessons, but that’s not true in every case. For example, having discussed some misconceptions about the language in part 1, why save the last three examples for part 10? Why not just group all that material into one day’s lessons, probably in the “Questions and Traps” sections in days 7, 8 and 9? That would have freed up Section 10 to expand on how to write beautiful prose.
But these are minor annoyances. The general content of the course was very good, and well worth the price of admission. I would recommend it to anyone with a good level of portuguese who wants to appear more polished in their written language.
António Ramalho Eanes (Eones, Superman) and Ernesto Melo Antunes (Melro). The image is, of course, aligned left
Ouvi falar deste livro no instagram. A Ana Luiz li-o há umas semanas. Naquela altura, eu estava a ler A Construção da Democracia em Portugal. “Epá!” pensei (mas confesso que pensei em inglês) “este livro tem bom aspeto e pode ser uma boa sobremesa depois de todo este espinafre não ficção” Comprei um exemplar duma loja de segunda mão porque é antigo e não é disponível nas livrarias online. Vale mesmo a pena. De súbito, todas as personagens da história que tinha lido anteriormente animaram se cá diante dos meus olhos. Eanes (EONES) no papel de Superman, nasceu no planeta CROPCON (baseado em Copcon que realmente na época pós-revolução) e viaja para Portugal onde tenta cumprir a sua missão histórica apesar dos esforços dos seus inimigos e concorrentes tal como Solares (Soares) e Fiasco (Vasco) Lourenço. Augusto Cid é, claro, um artista talentoso. O livro foi lançado em 1978, na época de instabilidade depois da revolução (Abril 1974) e a contrarrevolução (Novembro 1975), mas a sua carreira continuo até o seu falecimento recente. Dá para entender muito sobre o espírito do época, mas é óbvio que o autor tem desgosto do Eanes. A história não tem nada de simpatia pelo seu cargo. Portanto não é justo (mas quem disse que livros satíricos devem ser justos?) Recomendo a opinião de Ana Luiz neste site porque ela sabe mais do que eu e menciona algo da história do livro em si, e a resposta polémica do governo.
I usually put a link to the books I review on here but I don’t think you can get this easily. Augusto Cid has some more recent books though and you can buy those here.