Portugais (masculin) "poor-chew-gay"
Portugaise (feminin) "poor-chew-gaze"
It's not easy answering pronunciation questions as it depends on your own accent (English-American-German-etc...)
You can say "graduated in languages", and then You can specify the languages you graduated in: Portuguese, Spanish, English, French.. You can say "graduated in languages", and then You can specify the languages you graduated in: Portuguese, Spanish, English, French..
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Gabrielle seems to be a french name. In spanish or portuguese it would be Gabriela.
That's not Portuguese, that's French, and 'moi' means in French 'me'.
ummm.... they speak portuguese!
Glace in French hielo in spanish ghiaccio in italian gelo in portuguese
"Yes" in Portuguese is "sim".
to say language in portuguese, you would say 'lingua'
"Onde" is how you say "where" in Portuguese.
According to Google translate, "wanderer" translates to In Spanish: vagabundo In Portuguese: viajante In French: vagabond
Port-nouveau is a French equivalent of the Portuguese name Porto-novo.Specifically, the masculine nouns port in French and porto in Portuguese mean "port". The masculine adjective nouveau in French and novo in Portuguese translate as "new". The pronunciation will be "pohr noo-voh" in French and "POHR-too NOH-voo" in Portuguese.
Le pêcheur is a French equivalent of the Portuguese phrase o pescador.Specifically, the French masculine singular definite article le and the Portuguese o mean "the." The French masculine noun pêcheur and the Portuguese pescador mean "fisherman." The pronunciation will be "luh peh-shuhr" in French and "oo PEH-shkuh-dohr" in Portuguese.