Quechua is a native language of Peru, so no.
Most speak Spanish but one can find Peruvians who speak Portuguese near the border and in big cities.Most people from Peru speak Spanish. A number of Indian Languages are spoken there.no
The question it self is confusing. Portuguese is a language. A person native to Portugal is Portuguese or a Lusitanic (person that speaks Portuguese language) They can also be Iberian. A person residing in the Iberian peninsula Portugal and Spain Portuguese is also spoken in Brazil, and parts of India, china, and Uruguay. There are Portuguese communities in Almost every country in the world.
The main language is Portuguese, with 250 million native speakers in 2012.
There are no more Portuguese colonies. Two countries that used to be Portuguese colonies are East Timor, where Portuguese shares official language status with the native Tetum; and Macau, where Portuguese shares official language status with Chinese.
Portuguese is the native language only of the country of Portugal. Like Spanish, it traces its origins back to the interactions, in Iberia, between the Latin language of the ancient Romans and the ancient languages of the Iberian Peninsula. From Portugal, the language spread throughout the world by way of the explorations and colonizations of the Portuguese navigators of the 15th century onward. Portuguese colonies were set up in Africa, the Americas, and Asia. In the former colonies, for example, the descendants of ancient immigrant families and those of newly arriving immigrants have become native speakers of Portuguese. For Portuguese became the naturalized language, and stayed on as the official language, in many of the former colonies. And so, for example, Portuguese may be described as the native language of generations of Portuguese speakers in Angola, Cape Verde Islands, Guineau-Bissau, Mozambique, and Sao Tome and Principe; in Brazil; and in East Timor and Macau. But the language's status is actually as a successfully transplanted, naturalizedlanguage of those countries. And, for example, Portuguese may be described as the native language of generations of Portuguese speaking communities in Argentina, The Co-operative Republic of Guyana, and Uruguay; and in Equatorial Guinea, Mauritius, and Senegal. But, once again, the language's status is actually as a successfully transplanted, naturalized language of those countries.
If you can speak Portuguese, you should speak Portuguese. If you can't, then you can try to speak your native language.
The majority of Brazilians speak Portuguese as their native language.
If you are referring to number of native speakers, it's Portuguese.
Of course yes... their native language is portuguese, but if they study English they can speak it like the Americans can speak another language studying it!!! (stupid question)
No. Brazilian could be any one of several native languages. The official language of Brazil is Portuguese.
Italian, Portuguese, and Chinese. Italian was his mother tongue. He learned Portuguese and eventually learned Chinese.