Brazilians speak portugese
Many Brazilians are of Portuguese descent, but the country is one of the most diverse on the planet. They speak the Portuguese language, much like Americans speak English. The original colonial power structure favored that language.
Yes. Native brasilians.
First of all Brasilians speak portuguese. I am lost would be "Eu estou perdido"
The language that Brasilians speak is Portugese.(IM SURE OF IT :)
...a nice country, people may seem "cold", but a couple of beers will help you both. And basketball is the....well, actually, almost the first religion, like football to brasilians.
I know that as traveling as an American into England I needed my passport and to fill out the forms about where I was going, why and how long I would be there. I imagine it is the same for Brazilian's They are pretty strict.
I don't have a professional answer to this question, but being born in the United States from Brasilian parents and growing up in a Brasilian prevalent area, I think the biggest reason why Brasilians care so much about how they look is because the rest of the world remembers only the half-naked dancing carnival ladies and famous models. Unfortunately, that's the most Brasilian culture about half of the world sees. Once you look past that obvious detail, you can see there are many other things Brasilians care about. Then again, it's like me asking a French person why they care so much about wine, cheese and bread or a Japanese person why they care so much about anime or a Spanish person why they love novellas so much. It's tough to generalize like this because, like the United States, Brasil and the rest of the world has an EXTREMELY diverse popoulation. Some Brasilians hate the very things they are remembered for--my friend can't stand soccer and my mom hates samba; some Americans hate jazz; some Canadians can't stand Formula One; not all Chinese people know Kung Fu. It's a generalization that just isn't fair for the culture. I am a human being who belongs to the Kingdom of Christ, so my citizenship is split three ways. Which one culture am I going to devote my highest values? I actually see many more Americans care about their body than Brasilians--especially about weight. So, to answer your question, I believe Brasilians are known for caring about their bodies so much because the rest of the world puts a huge pressure to be the perfectly beautiful women and men from the warm samba-dancing peace-loving country in South America.
The future tense of "speak" is "will speak" or "shall speak."
Some common phrases using the word speak are: on (or not on) speaking terms with someone; speak English, speak ill of someone; speak ill of the dead; speak in rhymes; speak no good of someone; speak of the dead; speak no evil; speak out; speak softly and carry a big stick; speak the truth; speak truth to power; speak to me; speak up; think before you speak
The present infinitive of "speak" is "to speak."
Sprechen: to speak I speak You speak He speaks We speak You all speak They speak Hope that helped :)
To conjugate "to speak" in English, you would use the base form "speak" for present tense (I speak, you speak, he/she speaks, we speak, they speak), the past tense "spoke" (I spoke, you spoke, he/she spoke, we spoke, they spoke), and the past participle "spoken" (I have spoken, you have spoken, he/she has spoken, we have spoken, they have spoken).