The Portuguese equivalent of the English phrase 'Good night, Baby' is the following: Boa noite, gata. The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: BOH-uh NOY-tchee GAH-tuh. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'boa' means 'good'; 'noite' 'night'; 'gata' 'cat'.
The literal Portuguese equivalent of the English word 'baby' is bebê, which is pronounced bay-bay. But the slang equivalent of the term of endearment is gata, for a female babe; and gato, which is pronounced GAH-too, for a male.
The Brazilian Portuguese phrase for 'good night' is Boa Noite, which is pronounced as BO-uh NOY-chee.
Good morning, on the Brazilian portuguese language is " Bom dia ".
boa noite bebe
boa noite mulher bonita
Meu doce (''my honey'') is not usual. Use the word ''querida'', is better, has the same meaning as ''honey'' for you. So, ''Good Night Honey'' is ''Boa Noite, Querida''
"Porta-te bem" - informal portugal's portuguese "Porte-se bem" Formal portugal's portuguese / Brazilian portuguese
A good website that can get you started is sonia-portuguese.com However, it's more of the Brazilian portuguese rather than Portugal's portuguese.
The English equivalent of a 'good luck bracelet' in Brazilian Portuguese is the following: a fita. The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: ah FEE-tuh. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'a' means 'the'; and 'fita' 'ribbon'.
Boa noite! is a Portuguese equivalent of the English phrase "Good night!" The feminine singular greeting may be heard as the last wish exchanged between a listener and a speaker as a courtesy before bedtime or as an indication that they will not be seeing one another again until the following morning at the earliest. The pronunciation will be "BO-uh noitch" in Cariocan Brazilian and continental Portuguese.
Boa noite
This is a good place www.brazilianportugueselessons.com/
Boa noite, princesa! is a Portuguese equivalent of the English phrase "Good night, princess!" The greeting models a rare instance whereby English and Portuguese sentence structure resemble one another. The pronunciation will be "BO-uh noytch preen-SEH-zuh" in Cariocan Brazilian and in continental Portuguese.