Portugal and Brazil are two countries separated by the Atlantic Ocean, but connected by the umbilical cord of a shared history. Brazil was a colony of Portugal for over three hundred years (1500-1822). Their relationship is a complex tangle of love, pain, admiration, and sometimes resentment. Brazilians often call Portuguese people "manuelas" or "tugidos," while Portuguese people mock Brazilian "excessive expansiveness." However, behind these stereotypes lies a deep cultural closeness that makes the two nations a unique example of postcolonial interaction. In this article, we will explore what unites them and what differentiates them today, in 2026.Common: the language that unitesPortuguese is the main thing that unites the two countries. However, this commonality is deceptive: Brazilians and Portuguese speak the same language but often do not understand each other. Differences in pronunciation, lexis, grammar. Brazilian Portuguese is more open, melodic, with nasal vowels (amber sound). European Portuguese (Portuguese from Portugal) is closed, "whispery," with vowel reduction. Brazilians say "você" (you) politely, while in Portugal, "tu" is used. In lexis: "ônibus" (Br) vs "autocarro" (Pt), "trem" vs "comboio," "abacaxi" vs "ananás." Slang: the Brazilian "beleza?" (how are you?) is not understood by a Portuguese person. However, both versions are understandable after a little adaptation. It is language that is the foundation of Lusophony (the community of Portuguese-speaking countries). Joint literary prizes, teleconferences, courses are held annually.History: colonizer and colonyBrazil was discovered by the Portuguese navigator Pedro Álvares Cabral in 1500. Since then, colonization began: the importation of slaves from Africa, deforestation, gold and diamond mining. Portugal exploited Brazil, but also gave it language, religion, law, architecture, culinary habits. In 1808, Portuguese King João VI fled to Brazil from Napoleon, moving the capital to Rio de Janeiro. T ...
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