But today, I saw a Portuguese friend of mine who speaks English and I just automatically started trying to explain something to him in Portuguese. I forgot to speak English. Haha. And he understood me! Good sign.
Baby steps.
But today, I saw a Portuguese friend of mine who speaks English and I just automatically started trying to explain something to him in Portuguese. I forgot to speak English. Haha. And he understood me! Good sign.
Baby steps.
But today, I saw a Portuguese friend of mine who speaks English and I just automatically started trying to explain something to him in Portuguese. I forgot to speak English. Haha. And he understood me! Good sign.
Baby steps.
If I were trying to conquer or learn Portuguese I'd go this route:
1. Spanish then
2. Italian then
3. French then
4. Portuguese
...of the 4, Portuguese seems the hardest.
Spanish the easiest, Italian the next easiest, French more difficult, and Portuguese the most difficult.
But today, I saw a Portuguese friend of mine who speaks English and I just automatically started trying to explain something to him in Portuguese. I forgot to speak English. Haha. And he understood me! Good sign.
Baby steps.
If I were trying to conquer or learn Portuguese I'd go this route:
1. Spanish then
2. Italian then
3. French then
4. Portuguese
...of the 4, Portuguese seems the hardest.
Spanish the easiest, Italian the next easiest, French more difficult, and Portuguese the most difficult.
In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
I find Italian very easy to learn, I think I'd pick it up as fast as I learned Spanish if I listened to people talking it daily.In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
Eu te diria pra arrumar um namorado brazuca, moça do bumbum médio. Mas você é casada, então vai ter que sofrer pelo caminho mais duro.
Maybe to a native Spanish speaker.
Canadian/Quebec French seemed the most incomprehensible to an outsider. It would rank up there with Brazilian Portuguese in level of difficulty.
You can actually understand Parisian French & Quebec French is totally incomprehensible
I find Italian very easy to learn, I think I'd pick it up as fast as I learned Spanish if I listened to people talking it daily.In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
Maybe to a native Spanish speaker.
Canadian/Quebec French seemed the most incomprehensible to an outsider. It would rank up there with Brazilian Portuguese in level of difficulty.
You can actually understand Parisian French & Quebec French is totally incomprehensible
The problem with Spanish is that they have a lot of variations because of all the countries and some of them put indigenous words in the midst, a lot of them, like the Ecuadorians
In college when our Mexican intern arrived our Spanish speakers were not available one of our crew had rudimentary Italian skills from speaking to her grandparents growing up, they were able to communicateI find Italian very easy to learn, I think I'd pick it up as fast as I learned Spanish if I listened to people talking it daily.In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
I watch movies in different languages on Netflix. I agree with you, Italian is not that hard to follow.
In college when our Mexican intern arrived our Spanish speakers were not available one of our crew had rudimentary Italian skills from speaking to her grandparents growing up, they were able to communicateI find Italian very easy to learn, I think I'd pick it up as fast as I learned Spanish if I listened to people talking it daily.In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
I watch movies in different languages on Netflix. I agree with you, Italian is not that hard to follow.
Eu te diria pra arrumar um namorado brazuca, moça do bumbum médio. Mas você é casada, então vai ter que sofrer pelo caminho mais duro.
That looks difficult without even hearing it.
But today, I saw a Portuguese friend of mine who speaks English and I just automatically started trying to explain something to him in Portuguese. I forgot to speak English. Haha. And he understood me! Good sign.
Baby steps.
If I were trying to conquer or learn Portuguese I'd go this route:
1. Spanish then
2. Italian then
3. French then
4. Portuguese
...of the 4, Portuguese seems the hardest.
Spanish the easiest, Italian the next easiest, French more difficult, and Portuguese the most difficult.
In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
Eu te diria pra arrumar um namorado brazuca, moça do bumbum médio. Mas você é casada, então vai ter que sofrer pelo caminho mais duro.
That looks difficult without even hearing it.
One thing that's really sad here in Brazil though, it's probably one of the biggest needs we have here in terms of labor, people who speak English.
Twenty years ago they decided Spanish was more important than English because of all the trade agreements, so they started removing English and teaching it instead. Some said English was "a waste of time" and a "colonization tool" and many students never learned the basics anyway because it was too difficult.
Many people here put "Spanish" in the language field when trying to get a job, but if they had to actually speak it one day or understand someone speaking, they'd be screwed.
Meanwhile, a lot of companies don't invest or do business here because it's hard to find English speakers.
But today, I saw a Portuguese friend of mine who speaks English and I just automatically started trying to explain something to him in Portuguese. I forgot to speak English. Haha. And he understood me! Good sign.
Baby steps.
If I were trying to conquer or learn Portuguese I'd go this route:
1. Spanish then
2. Italian then
3. French then
4. Portuguese
...of the 4, Portuguese seems the hardest.
Spanish the easiest, Italian the next easiest, French more difficult, and Portuguese the most difficult.
In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
I've studied all four. I agree with Portuguese being the most difficult and Spanish being easiest. French second most difficult. French seems so much easier to understand now that I've been tackling Portuguese for three years. LOL. Spanish is by far the most logical and straight forward of all of them.
I find Italian very easy to learn, I think I'd pick it up as fast as I learned Spanish if I listened to people talking it daily.In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
But today, I saw a Portuguese friend of mine who speaks English and I just automatically started trying to explain something to him in Portuguese. I forgot to speak English. Haha. And he understood me! Good sign.
Baby steps.
If I were trying to conquer or learn Portuguese I'd go this route:
1. Spanish then
2. Italian then
3. French then
4. Portuguese
...of the 4, Portuguese seems the hardest.
Spanish the easiest, Italian the next easiest, French more difficult, and Portuguese the most difficult.
In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
I've studied all four. I agree with Portuguese being the most difficult and Spanish being easiest. French second most difficult. French seems so much easier to understand now that I've been tackling Portuguese for three years. LOL. Spanish is by far the most logical and straight forward of all of them.
I guess being a native Spanish speaker, Portuguese doesn't seem as hard to me.
French is just a lot different as far as Romance languages go, it's the outlier if you will.
I can’t remember but you must have had some Romance language back in your professional student days, oui?
Eu te diria pra arrumar um namorado brazuca, moça do bumbum médio. Mas você é casada, então vai ter que sofrer pelo caminho mais duro.
But today, I saw a Portuguese friend of mine who speaks English and I just automatically started trying to explain something to him in Portuguese. I forgot to speak English. Haha. And he understood me! Good sign.
Baby steps.
If I were trying to conquer or learn Portuguese I'd go this route:
1. Spanish then
2. Italian then
3. French then
4. Portuguese
...of the 4, Portuguese seems the hardest.
Spanish the easiest, Italian the next easiest, French more difficult, and Portuguese the most difficult.
In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
I've studied all four. I agree with Portuguese being the most difficult and Spanish being easiest. French second most difficult. French seems so much easier to understand now that I've been tackling Portuguese for three years. LOL. Spanish is by far the most logical and straight forward of all of them.
I guess being a native Spanish speaker, Portuguese doesn't seem as hard to me.
French is just a lot different as far as Romance languages go, it's the outlier if you will.
Portuguese has some very uncommon grammar rules that are very different from Spanish. And European PT is not the same as Brasileiro in that regard. The pronunciation of European PT is insane. Nothing even close to Spanish pronunciation of vowels. For instance, United States is spelled Estados Unidos in PT, just like in Spanish. But it is pronounced Statch Oonetch. When someone is speaking fast, you can hardly pick it out of a sentence. When I said Estado Unidos, like in Spanish, at immigration, they said they didn't understand me. It's much easier to read it than to speak or hear it. I have a Spanish-speaking friend who teaches Spanish in the US. She studied Brazilian Portuguese for 9 years. When she came to PT, she did not understand a word. She was stupefied.
heres a jeopardy question
what isolated portugal from spain so much that portugal created their own language?
But today, I saw a Portuguese friend of mine who speaks English and I just automatically started trying to explain something to him in Portuguese. I forgot to speak English. Haha. And he understood me! Good sign.
Baby steps.
If I were trying to conquer or learn Portuguese I'd go this route:
1. Spanish then
2. Italian then
3. French then
4. Portuguese
...of the 4, Portuguese seems the hardest.
Spanish the easiest, Italian the next easiest, French more difficult, and Portuguese the most difficult.
In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
I've studied all four. I agree with Portuguese being the most difficult and Spanish being easiest. French second most difficult. French seems so much easier to understand now that I've been tackling Portuguese for three years. LOL. Spanish is by far the most logical and straight forward of all of them.
I guess being a native Spanish speaker, Portuguese doesn't seem as hard to me.
French is just a lot different as far as Romance languages go, it's the outlier if you will.
Portuguese has some very uncommon grammar rules that are very different from Spanish. And European PT is not the same as Brasileiro in that regard. The pronunciation of European PT is insane. Nothing even close to Spanish pronunciation of vowels. For instance, United States is spelled Estados Unidos in PT, just like in Spanish. But it is pronounced Statch Oonetch. When someone is speaking fast, you can hardly pick it out of a sentence. When I said Estado Unidos, like in Spanish, at immigration, they said they didn't understand me. It's much easier to read it than to speak or hear it. I have a Spanish-speaking friend who teaches Spanish in the US. She studied Brazilian Portuguese for 9 years. When she came to PT, she did not understand a word. She was stupefied.
I've only heard Portuguese speakers from the Azores, not mainland Portugal. Maybe there's a vast difference between the way the two are spoken.
But today, I saw a Portuguese friend of mine who speaks English and I just automatically started trying to explain something to him in Portuguese. I forgot to speak English. Haha. And he understood me! Good sign.
Baby steps.
If I were trying to conquer or learn Portuguese I'd go this route:
1. Spanish then
2. Italian then
3. French then
4. Portuguese
...of the 4, Portuguese seems the hardest.
Spanish the easiest, Italian the next easiest, French more difficult, and Portuguese the most difficult.
In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
I've studied all four. I agree with Portuguese being the most difficult and Spanish being easiest. French second most difficult. French seems so much easier to understand now that I've been tackling Portuguese for three years. LOL. Spanish is by far the most logical and straight forward of all of them.
I guess being a native Spanish speaker, Portuguese doesn't seem as hard to me.
French is just a lot different as far as Romance languages go, it's the outlier if you will.
Portuguese has some very uncommon grammar rules that are very different from Spanish. And European PT is not the same as Brasileiro in that regard. The pronunciation of European PT is insane. Nothing even close to Spanish pronunciation of vowels. For instance, United States is spelled Estados Unidos in PT, just like in Spanish. But it is pronounced Statch Oonetch. When someone is speaking fast, you can hardly pick it out of a sentence. When I said Estado Unidos, like in Spanish, at immigration, they said they didn't understand me. It's much easier to read it than to speak or hear it. I have a Spanish-speaking friend who teaches Spanish in the US. She studied Brazilian Portuguese for 9 years. When she came to PT, she did not understand a word. She was stupefied.
I've only heard Portuguese speakers from the Azores, not mainland Portugal. Maybe there's a vast difference between the way the two are spoken.
I know the accents are different, but I've never spoken to anyone from the Azores, so I can't say how different. Here, Azores is pronounced Zorsh. Many vowels just completely disappear, and "S" has three different sounds: sh, ss, and zz. R's also have three different sounds.
But today, I saw a Portuguese friend of mine who speaks English and I just automatically started trying to explain something to him in Portuguese. I forgot to speak English. Haha. And he understood me! Good sign.
Baby steps.
If I were trying to conquer or learn Portuguese I'd go this route:
1. Spanish then
2. Italian then
3. French then
4. Portuguese
...of the 4, Portuguese seems the hardest.
Spanish the easiest, Italian the next easiest, French more difficult, and Portuguese the most difficult.
In order of difficulty it's probably:
Spanish
Portuguese
Italian
French
I've studied all four. I agree with Portuguese being the most difficult and Spanish being easiest. French second most difficult. French seems so much easier to understand now that I've been tackling Portuguese for three years. LOL. Spanish is by far the most logical and straight forward of all of them.
I guess being a native Spanish speaker, Portuguese doesn't seem as hard to me.
French is just a lot different as far as Romance languages go, it's the outlier if you will.
Portuguese has some very uncommon grammar rules that are very different from Spanish. And European PT is not the same as Brasileiro in that regard. The pronunciation of European PT is insane. Nothing even close to Spanish pronunciation of vowels. For instance, United States is spelled Estados Unidos in PT, just like in Spanish. But it is pronounced Statch Oonetch. When someone is speaking fast, you can hardly pick it out of a sentence. When I said Estado Unidos, like in Spanish, at immigration, they said they didn't understand me. It's much easier to read it than to speak or hear it. I have a Spanish-speaking friend who teaches Spanish in the US. She studied Brazilian Portuguese for 9 years. When she came to PT, she did not understand a word. She was stupefied.
I've only heard Portuguese speakers from the Azores, not mainland Portugal. Maybe there's a vast difference between the way the two are spoken.
I know the accents are different, but I've never spoken to anyone from the Azores, so I can't say how different. Here, Azores is pronounced Zorsh. Many vowels just completely disappear, and "S" has three different sounds: sh, ss, and zz. R's also have three different sounds.
Yeah, when I hear Portuguese it sounds like they're speaking with their mouth full to me.
heres a jeopardy question
what isolated portugal from spain so much that portugal created their own language?
well something isolated them, ie a mountain rangeheres a jeopardy question
what isolated portugal from spain so much that portugal created their own language?
I often read here that Portuguese is closest to the original Latin. So creating their own language is not really accurate if that's true. But it could be myth.