Friend in Portuguese is amigo (for male) and amiga (for female)
The language spoken in Brazil is Portuguese - not Brazilian. The word "friend" in Portuguese is "amigo" (male) or "amiga" (female).
Amigo (male friend) Amiga (female friend)
The Portuguese word for lady is "senhora."
The word plain in Portuguese is: "planicie."
The plural form of the word "Portuguese" is "Portuguese." It remains the same in both singular and plural forms.
The language spoken in Brazil is Portuguese - not Brazilian. The word "friend" in Portuguese is "amigo" (male) or "amiga" (female).
amigo (male friend) amiga (female friend)
Best friend means "melhor amigo" in portuguese. best = melhor friend = amigo
Amigo (male friend) Amiga (female friend)
Amigo is already a spanish and portuguese word which means "friend".
The Portuguese equivalent of the English greeting 'Hello, friend' is the following: Oi or ola, amiga or amigo. The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: oy; oh-LAH; ah-MEE-guh; ah-MEE-goo. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'oi' and 'ola' mean 'hello'; 'amiga' and 'amigo' mean 'friend'. The greeting 'oi' ends to be used in Brazil, 'ola' in Portugal.
You meant in Portuguese? Brazilian Portuguese? If so... Best Friend = Melhor amigo
The Portuguese word for lady is "senhora."
Stag is not a portuguese word.
The word plain in Portuguese is: "planicie."
KEE-fee is a Portuguese pronunciation of 'Keefe'. It isn't a word in Portuguese. A Portuguese speaker tends to apply Portuguese pronunciation rules to this non-Portuguese word.
The plural form of the word "Portuguese" is "Portuguese." It remains the same in both singular and plural forms.