A) the shift of power from Portugal to Brazil
Portugal and Brazil. Portuguese is a language not a culture.
In Portuguese we spell it Brasil, but the "s" is pronounced as a "z".
They are Brazilian and they speak portuguese as their official language
No; it was the Portuguese.
To say "hi" in Portuguese, you can say "oi" or "olรก." Both of these are commonly used greetings in Brazil and Portugal.
The Portuguese equivalent of the English greeting 'hi' is the following: oi; or olá. The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: oy; and oh-LAH. The first example tends to be used in Brazil, the latter in Portugal.
In Brazil, "hi" can be translated as "oi" or "olรก." These are common ways to greet someone in Portuguese, which is the official language of Brazil.
"pt." is the abbreviation of Portuguese. If you wanna write specific about the Portuguese variant/accent from Brazil, you can write "pt_br."/"pt-br." You can go with "pt_pt."/"pt-pt." if talking about the Portuguese accent or European Portuguese.
The Portuguese equivalent of the English greeting 'hi' tends to be Ola, which is pronounced Oh-LAH, in Portugal. The equivalent in Brazil tends to be Oi, which is pronounced Oy. But particularly in the south Brazil, where there's a lot of interaction across the borders with Argentina and Uruguay, the greeting Ola becomes at least as common as Oi. For the equivalent greeting in Spanish is the same, but pronounced differently as OH-lah.In Brazil, it's oi. In Portugal, it's ola, with the accent on the 'a'.
No. Brazil was originally a Portuguese colony which is why the language of Brazil is Portuguese.
the Portuguese found Brazil originally. they settled in Brazil and that's why Portuguese is the most widely spoken language in Brazil today.
The language spoken in Brazil is Brazilian Portuguese, or just Portuguese.
Approximately 97% of the population in Brazil speaks Portuguese.
In Brazil they speak Portuguese. The Portuguese word for girl is 'menina'
Brazil has the most Portuguese speakers in the world.
In Portuguese, you say "hi" as "oi" or "olรก".