Poo is "cocô". Note that I wrote cocô with the circumflex diacritic. It is different from "coco" without the diacritic that means coconut. The difference in pronunciation is subtle but very important if you don't want to pass for embarrassing situations. I don't know how to convey this difference here but you can learn it quickly talking with a native.
Cocô is like poo a very informal word used by children and among family and friends. If you want to say feces you say in Portuguese fezes.
On the other hand if you don't want to be so polite you can say "merda" that is the equivalent to shit.
Good learning.
the Portuguese for garbage is 'lixo'
Hugs in Portuguese is ABRAÇOS.
The word for "twins" in portuguese is "gêmeas"
You say "feliz".
You say "príncipe"
The Brazilian Portuguese equivalent of the English word 'weather' is the following: o tempo. The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: oo TEH-poo. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'o' means' the'; 'tempo' 'weather'.
to say yes in portuguese you say "se"
to say language in portuguese, you would say 'lingua'
"Onde" is how you say "where" in Portuguese.
Caca and cocô are Portuguese equivalents of the English word "poo." The two words may be preceded, immediately and respectively, by the feminine singular a or the masculine singular o since Portuguese employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The respective pronunciations will be "(a) KA-kuh" and "(oo) koo-KO" in Cariocan Brazilian and in continental Portuguese.
"Fuzzy"-and yes, this is the way to say it in Portuguese
To say "your location" in Portuguese, you would say "sua localização".
You say "colher".
Chefão
the word for poo is giashmal
Five, poo-poo-bazillion. teehee
Because im from Poland i know how you say poo in Polish,its kupa