The equivalent in Brazilian Portuguese of the English phrase 'How do you say' is Como se diz. The pronunciation is the following: KOH-moo see djeesh. And the word-by-word translation is the following: 'como' means 'how'; 'se' 'itself'; and 'diz' 'it does say'. The combination of 'se' and 'diz' is the form of the reflexive verb. So rougher translation that's closer to the literal meaning of the phrase is 'How is it said' or 'How does one say'.
"Olá" is how you say hello in Brazilian Portuguese.
"Beijos" is how you say "kisses" in Brazilian Portuguese.
In Brazilian Portuguese, you can say "Como você está?" to ask "How are you?"
You would say "Eu sou brasileiro" in Brazilian Portuguese.
You can say "Estou muito feliz" in Brazilian Portuguese.
"Olá" is how you say hello in Brazilian Portuguese.
"Beijos" is how you say "kisses" in Brazilian Portuguese.
In Brazilian Portuguese, you can say "Como você está?" to ask "How are you?"
You would say "Eu sou brasileiro" in Brazilian Portuguese.
You can say "Estou muito feliz" in Brazilian Portuguese.
You can say "Eu entendo" in Brazilian Portuguese to mean "I understand."
You say "meu filho" in Brazilian Portuguese to refer to my son.
The problem in Brazilian portuguese is o problema.
"Yes" in Brazilian Portuguese is "sim."
In Brazilian Portuguese, you say "obrigado" if you are male or "obrigada" if you are female to say 'thank you'.
Harmony is harmonia in Portuguese. (Brazilians speak Portuguese not "Brazilian").
There isn't an equivalent name in Brazilian Portuguese for Barry.