I just realized that the star above the line on the Brazilian flag could be the one representing the area with the capital of Brazil - Brazilia. Is that right?
@@Taurus388 You are right, Brasilia was established in 1960 and the first version of the flag was created in 1889. But as the stars represent the states, each time a state is added to the country or disappears from the country, the flag is changed. But I cheked the first version of the flag and one star above the white line was already there, so it cannot be Brasilia.
The star represents the state of Para. By the time of the proclamation of the republic it was the only state to have its capital above the equator. Today, as Para, two more states have their capitals above the equator. I'm not sure why it remained alone though. Stars and theirs states: pt.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandeira_do_Brasil#/media/Ficheiro%3AFlag_of_Brazil_(sphere).svg
The "deforestation" problem in the amazon rainforest being to provide more lands for agriculture is completly untrue. That is strongly illegal, so if someone try that, not only will lose the job, but will also take heavy charges or go to jail. On top of that, most of the amazon forest soil is very sandy, after you take the trees away the soil becames too poor for the crops, so not worth it at all. Keeping the rainforest is way more useful to the Brazilian farming because it provides seazonal rain for the central region of the country, where most farming takes place. And most of the fires that happen are located more close to the Cerrado region (tropical savana) where fires are common and normal since ever in general, there are even some plants who evolved to survive the fires, but there are some human made too. The real big deforestation is caused by illegal woodcuting and illegal mining, even being illegal there are buyers for the wood in the black market, most of it from outside of Brazil because its kind of a luxury. The same for the mining, even some "ONGs" who go to the amazon forest claiming that they want to help to protect it, end up as some cover for illegal things like that. It's a huge area so it's difficult to monitor everywhere
Brazilian TV is now reprising The Clone, everyday around 5-6PM when i get home from work its on TV. When it first aired i was a kid so don't remember nothing, i think they're doing this to show The Clone to the new generations. I never knew brazilian soap operas were famous in other countries that was interesting to learn. Great reaction video!
Venham todos pro Brasil precisamos de imigrantes temos milhões de postos de trabalho e temos muita água limpa e muita comida todos são bem-vindos no Brasil 😊
In Brazil, the official language is Portuguese, but there are cities that have more than one official language, such as São Gabriel da Cachoeira, in Amazonas. Four languages are spoken in the city: Portuguese, Baniwa, Tukano and Nheengatu. In the south there are some cities where the Pomeranian dialect of German is considered the second official language of the city and in others the Italian dialect and the Venetian language are official in the city, even having radios that broadcast their programming in the local language. And another curiosity is that there are more Lebanese in Brazil (7.1 million) than Lebanese in Lebanon (6.77 million).
I loved your explanation about the languages that exist in Brazil. I learned a little of the indigenous language "Guaraní - Kaiowá", it is simply beautiful and rich, the pronunciation is wonderful.
que legal que você citou as novelas brasileiras. acho que Escrava Isaura foi a novela brasileira de maior sucesso na Rússia, que na época até parou o parlamento russo... algo assim.
Miss, I have to say that not only as a brazilian but as a human I have loved your content. I didnt watched only to this video; i watched another 5 ones. So the way you make your content and your personal way of speach are very good. Hope to see more of your potential here because Im already subscribed. THANKSSSSS
The german language spoken here is called "Riograndenser Hunsrückisch". We also have a variant of Venetian called "Talian" or "Brazilian Veneto". Both of these languages have pretty much disappeared, since they were outlawed in Brazil during WW2 (same happened with Japanese). There has been a revival of sorts, where these languages became co-oficial with Portuguese in some regions. Another curiosity about language in Brazil: Most people used to speak the "Língua Geral" (General/Common Tongue), which is a Tupi language codified by the Jesuit priests. It lasted up until the 20th century in some regions.
@@SeagulltheExplorer nooooooo, it's a Brazilian slang, we really like cultural exchanges so we say that when someone from another country does or says something about ours because it ends up kind of bringing up several Brazilian comments in the video which for some is good and for others it is bad (depends on the person), and a good saying, let's say, put a flag or Brazil in your video and you will be invoking Brazilians.
I am from Rio Grande do Sul state and its true that here, even today, we have people speaking European languages like German and Italian, especially the old population in small towns like my one. My grandparents only speaks in Italian or something near to the now days Italian. Your research was very good, somethings I even didnt know.
Those older videos from Geography Now had less information, since the videos are in countries' name English alphabet order, Brazil was one of the first countries. Nowadays, the videos have more much information.
Yes, I agree, earlier videos have not that much info. Maybe when they finish doing all the countries, they can revisit the earlier ones and do longer amd more informative videos.
hello, I'm Brazilian, born in the northeast part of the country in the city with the name of salvador (the first capital of Brazil), about what you said at the end of the video I will answer a little here, Brazil as most people know and a mixed country we have in our blood several nationalities that mixes our culture too, each region of Brazil has its own way of speaking Portuguese as well as its culture, food, landscapes, music among many other things that would not fit to fully explain in this I can only comment by talking to another Brazilian or researching more deeply to know that in addition to being a very large country, we also have many cultural riches.
Thank you so much for your comment! I do have Brazilian friends from different regions, but of course I will need to come to Brazil to actually feel the atmosphere of the country.
6:47 that's the state of Pará. When this flag was design, Pará had the northernmost capital in the country. Btw, great reaction! Could you also react to "The states of Brazil explained (Geography Now!)"?
Btw, as the blue globe is a representation of the ARMILLARY SPHERE and the white band is the EQUATOR, that explains why there is a single sky above the equator. It was probably one of the few north hemisphere stars that could be seen from Rio de Janeiro.
@@SeagulltheExplorer thanks this video is very cool, it shows the 25 biggest ethnic groups that are in Brazil (update), foreigners are always surprised when they watch it. rs
while many countries have stars in them, I think the Brazilian one is the only one where the starts ACTUALLY represent real constellations in a period of time (the sky above Rio de Janeiro on independence day) Notice HOWEVER that the stars are INVERTED. As if they were one a glass sphere being looked from outside. That is actually a reference to the ARMILLARY SPHERE, a navigation device that was important to Portuguese Exploration Age AND is on the Portuguese Flag AND the Brazilian Imperial Flag. Notice that the Armillary Sphere BAND (representing the equator) REMAINED on the flag too. Ps: there is no sense in saying the green and yellow do not represent forest and stuff. They DO. In the modern flag. Yes, they represented royal houses in the Imperial Period. But when Brazil became a Republic, the meaning of the colors was changed.
At the espírito santo there are some cities where the official language is pomeranian, a dialect of German spoken in ancient Pomerania ( Region between Germany and Poland)
@@VSvimalkumar It is a West Slavic language, Brazil has the largest number of Pomeranian speakers in the world, as in Germany and Poland it almost disappeared. Today there are about 300,000 Pomeranians in Brazil, they are the last Pomeranian communities in the world, they came during the second world war, and never returned to their region. (departs today from Poland and Germany).
In fact, Brazilian Portuguese is practically identical to Portuguese from portugal, it just changes the accent, it would be something like the English of UK and the US
Interesting! But if you think about it, British and American English are different, not only accent-wise, still they are mutually intelligible, so I got what you mean.
@@SeagulltheExplorer yes, some words may be a little different but it does not interfere with communication, Portuguese and Brazilians communicate without difficulties, Portuguese in Portugal is usually much more formal and Brazilians are more relaxed. excellent video congratulations from Brasil🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
Much love from Brazil! I've heard about all the troubles your people has had with Lukashenko. I hope you figure it all out the best way. God bless you.
One of the extinct languages of Brazil happens to be the “Brazilian common” that people of today have no idea what it sounds languages. The Brazilian common was a mixture of Tupi, guarani, Portuguese and African dialects spoken during the colonial period of Brazil. The language became extinct after the Portuguese court moved to Brazil escaping the Napoleon war!
Unfortunately only data on native languages is accurate in Brazil as the last census which asked about non-native languages was the 1950 census. I think it's unlikely 5% of Brazilians speak a language other than portuguese at home, as in 1950 it wasn't that high and it had been in stark decline in comparison to the 1940 census, which is a trend that probably continued with urbanization and the end of the mass migration era. The number of speakers of German, Italian and Japanese, which are all guesstimates, are, I think, grossly exaggerated - the estimations of 3m speakers of German dialects for example implies a massive growth on the usage of that language since 1950 which is wildly unlikely just by looking at the population growth of the regions where speakers of those languages were concentrated, even ignoring the factor of assimilation.
Thank you for your comment, but I just gave the numbers from Ethnologue, they usually try to give reliable data, so I ususally believe them. If their sources are wrong, I am sorry.
@@SeagulltheExplorer He is probably talking about the "sertão" which is a region in the northeast of the country predominantly arid and semi-arid, which goes through long periods of drought and only receives rains during the beginning of the year, since the seasons are not well defined when you are just below the equator and far from the coast. This is also an interesting topic and affects many people living in the region, although it's something that can be handled in most urban areas where resources are more accessible.
Actually by the way its SOCCER, Soccer is an brittish word and was used to seperate themselfs from irish football... And the united states isnt the only english speaking country that calls it SOCCER, canada, south africa, australia, new zealand. I suggest actually researching instead of generalizing or making stuff up
What did I make up? Although the name came from the UK, there the sport is called football. And I didn't know if only the US call it 'soccer', that's why I asked the question. You don't need to be mean when commenting on something, it is normal for people to not know something.
1)Brazilians understand 100% of portuguese from Portugal. ( We only find It funny...) 2) Indian languages in Brazil are spoken maximum by 0,000000001 % of the population ( almost nobody) PS: I'm Brazilian since 1967...
@@SeagulltheExplorer I understand, but It's really not true. Portuguese from Portugal is completely understandable by brazilians... Even the most different or fast way of talking is easily understood by brazilians... ( By the way, we brazilians understand almost 90% also of spanisch speakers, but the contrary is not so true... Especially Spain native speakers.)👍
@@fernandoroza6061 Ok, good to know! I think I mentioned it because some of my Brazilian friends mentioned it but perhaps I misunderstood something. Thank you for your insight!
OLÁ SENHORA DE ISRAEL, COMO A SENHORIA ESTÁ? DESCULPE, MAS TEM PARTES EM SEU COMENTÁRIO NÃO BATE,EU SOU NETO DE PORTUGUESES ,EU VOU DISCORDAR DA SENHORA NOSSA SEGUNDA LÍNGUA NÃO É O ESPANHOL, SÓ FALA O ESPANHOL NO BRASIL,QUEM VEM DE FORA, NOSSO VIZINHOS DA LÍNGUA ESPANHOLA, NEM O PORTUGUÊS FORMAL, NÃO FALAMOS O PORTUGUÊS DE PORTUGAL, NOSSA LÍNGUA E A LÍNGUA BRASILEIRA,TEMOS MUITAS VARIANTES DA LÍNGUA ,NÃO CONFIE EM LIVROS QUE ACEITA TUDO,VEM PESSOALMENTE VISITAR O BRASIL É VERÁS QUÊ A MAIORIA DE SEUS ESTUDOS FOI TAPEADA ,EM RELAÇÃO OS ALEMÃES TAMBÉM É UM EQUÍVOCO NA SUAS ANÁLISES, ESTUDE HISTÓRIAS DO BRASIL NO TH-cam TEM MUITAS VERDADES ,DESCULPE FOI SÓ UM ESCLARECIMENTOS,ATÉ A PRÓXIMA VEZ.
I just realized that the star above the line on the Brazilian flag could be the one representing the area with the capital of Brazil - Brazilia. Is that right?
@@Taurus388 You are right, Brasilia was established in 1960 and the first version of the flag was created in 1889. But as the stars represent the states, each time a state is added to the country or disappears from the country, the flag is changed. But I cheked the first version of the flag and one star above the white line was already there, so it cannot be Brasilia.
The star represents the state of Para. By the time of the proclamation of the republic it was the only state to have its capital above the equator. Today, as Para, two more states have their capitals above the equator. I'm not sure why it remained alone though.
Stars and theirs states:
pt.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandeira_do_Brasil#/media/Ficheiro%3AFlag_of_Brazil_(sphere).svg
@@jseus2340 Thank you!
The state of Pará
@@jseus2340 Belém is under the equator, but was the northern state capital by 1889.
The "deforestation" problem in the amazon rainforest being to provide more lands for agriculture is completly untrue.
That is strongly illegal, so if someone try that, not only will lose the job, but will also take heavy charges or go to jail. On top of that, most of the amazon forest soil is very sandy, after you take the trees away the soil becames too poor for the crops, so not worth it at all. Keeping the rainforest is way more useful to the Brazilian farming because it provides seazonal rain for the central region of the country, where most farming takes place.
And most of the fires that happen are located more close to the Cerrado region (tropical savana) where fires are common and normal since ever in general, there are even some plants who evolved to survive the fires, but there are some human made too.
The real big deforestation is caused by illegal woodcuting and illegal mining, even being illegal there are buyers for the wood in the black market, most of it from outside of Brazil because its kind of a luxury. The same for the mining, even some "ONGs" who go to the amazon forest claiming that they want to help to protect it, end up as some cover for illegal things like that.
It's a huge area so it's difficult to monitor everywhere
Brazilian TV is now reprising The Clone, everyday around 5-6PM when i get home from work its on TV. When it first aired i was a kid so don't remember nothing, i think they're doing this to show The Clone to the new generations. I never knew brazilian soap operas were famous in other countries that was interesting to learn. Great reaction video!
Oh wow! I think I would rewatch it just because it is a nice memory from my teenage years. And thanks, I am glad you liked the video!
Venham todos pro Brasil precisamos de imigrantes temos milhões de postos de trabalho e temos muita água limpa e muita comida todos são bem-vindos no Brasil 😊
The "deforestation" problem in the amazon rainforest being to provide more lands for agriculture is completly untrue.
Then it is good news. I've heard somewhere that some areas are off limits for people and the nature is thriving there.
In Brazil, the official language is Portuguese, but there are cities that have more than one official language, such as São Gabriel da Cachoeira, in Amazonas. Four languages are spoken in the city: Portuguese, Baniwa, Tukano and Nheengatu. In the south there are some cities where the Pomeranian dialect of German is considered the second official language of the city and in others the Italian dialect and the Venetian language are official in the city, even having radios that broadcast their programming in the local language. And another curiosity is that there are more Lebanese in Brazil (7.1 million) than Lebanese in Lebanon (6.77 million).
Thank you for sharing! It is very interesting!
I loved your explanation about the languages that exist in Brazil. I learned a little of the indigenous language "Guaraní - Kaiowá", it is simply beautiful and rich, the pronunciation is wonderful.
Thank you! I also found it interesting to learn about the languages in Brazil!
que legal que você citou as novelas brasileiras.
acho que Escrava Isaura foi a novela brasileira de maior sucesso na Rússia, que na época até parou o parlamento russo... algo assim.
Ah, ouvi falar dessa novela, ainda não assisti mas sei que foi muito popular mesmo!
Miss, I have to say that not only as a brazilian but as a human I have loved your content. I didnt watched only to this video; i watched another 5 ones. So the way you make your content and your personal way of speach are very good. Hope to see more of your potential here because Im already subscribed. THANKSSSSS
Thank you so much for your kind words, I really appreciate it! I will try to keep up!
The german language spoken here is called "Riograndenser Hunsrückisch". We also have a variant of Venetian called "Talian" or "Brazilian Veneto".
Both of these languages have pretty much disappeared, since they were outlawed in Brazil during WW2 (same happened with Japanese).
There has been a revival of sorts, where these languages became co-oficial with Portuguese in some regions.
Another curiosity about language in Brazil: Most people used to speak the "Língua Geral" (General/Common Tongue), which is a Tupi language codified by the Jesuit priests. It lasted up until the 20th century in some regions.
Thank you for sharing the info! I am always happy to learn new things about languages!
QUEM OUSA INVOCAR OS BRASILEIROS!
I am sorry, did I say something confusing?
@@SeagulltheExplorer nooooooo, it's a Brazilian slang, we really like cultural exchanges so we say that when someone from another country does or says something about ours because it ends up kind of bringing up several Brazilian comments in the video which for some is good and for others it is bad (depends on the person), and a good saying, let's say, put a flag or Brazil in your video and you will be invoking Brazilians.
@@Danrley8792 Ah, I see, thank you for explaining! I hope I didn't say anything that can offend someone.
@@SeagulltheExplorer well, it's hard to please everyone, but you didn't say anything that would offend. S2
I am from Rio Grande do Sul state and its true that here, even today, we have people speaking European languages like German and Italian, especially the old population in small towns like my one. My grandparents only speaks in Italian or something near to the now days Italian. Your research was very good, somethings I even didnt know.
Thank you, I am glad you like it! Do you speak German or Italian?
I speak a little italian but nothing close to my parents and grandparents. Also, sorry for my bad English. I'm still learning :)
Here in Espírito Santo some places still speak Pomeranian (German dialect)
Those older videos from Geography Now had less information, since the videos are in countries' name English alphabet order, Brazil was one of the first countries. Nowadays, the videos have more much information.
Yes, I agree, earlier videos have not that much info. Maybe when they finish doing all the countries, they can revisit the earlier ones and do longer amd more informative videos.
hello, I'm Brazilian, born in the northeast part of the country in the city with the name of salvador (the first capital of Brazil), about what you said at the end of the video I will answer a little here, Brazil as most people know and a mixed country we have in our blood several nationalities that mixes our culture too, each region of Brazil has its own way of speaking Portuguese as well as its culture, food, landscapes, music among many other things that would not fit to fully explain in this I can only comment by talking to another Brazilian or researching more deeply to know that in addition to being a very large country, we also have many cultural riches.
Thanks for the video s2
Thank you so much for your comment! I do have Brazilian friends from different regions, but of course I will need to come to Brazil to actually feel the atmosphere of the country.
Dang! you got alot of knowledge about languages 😲
I do a lot of research, that's my secret. :)
6:47 that's the state of Pará. When this flag was design, Pará had the northernmost capital in the country.
Btw, great reaction! Could you also react to "The states of Brazil explained (Geography Now!)"?
Thanks for the explanation! It makes sense now. And yes, it is a good idea for a reaction video.
Btw, as the blue globe is a representation of the ARMILLARY SPHERE and the white band is the EQUATOR, that explains why there is a single sky above the equator. It was probably one of the few north hemisphere stars that could be seen from Rio de Janeiro.
A good video to react to Lençois Maranhenses (the flooded desert) . A couple, english speakers, making a great review.
Thank you! I will make a note of it.
Nice !
React to TOP 25 etnias com mais descendentes no Brasil (atualizado)
Thank you! I will note down the video for my future reaction!
@@SeagulltheExplorer thanks this video is very cool, it shows the 25 biggest ethnic groups that are in Brazil (update), foreigners are always surprised when they watch it. rs
Well, I expected anything but soap operas to remind you of Brazil and that's so cool
Well, that's how I learned about Brazil when I was a kid. :) What did you expect, just curious :)
@@SeagulltheExplorer From what I have learned brazilian soap operas were big in Russia didn't know that was true in Ukraine as well 🤯
Also cheers from Rio Grande do Sul "white state" kkkk from the the black-indigenous resident 😆 Brazilian things...
while many countries have stars in them, I think the Brazilian one is the only one where the starts ACTUALLY represent real constellations in a period of time (the sky above Rio de Janeiro on independence day)
Notice HOWEVER that the stars are INVERTED. As if they were one a glass sphere being looked from outside.
That is actually a reference to the ARMILLARY SPHERE, a navigation device that was important to Portuguese Exploration Age AND is on the Portuguese Flag AND the Brazilian Imperial Flag.
Notice that the Armillary Sphere BAND (representing the equator) REMAINED on the flag too.
Ps: there is no sense in saying the green and yellow do not represent forest and stuff. They DO. In the modern flag. Yes, they represented royal houses in the Imperial Period. But when Brazil became a Republic, the meaning of the colors was changed.
Thank you for sharing! Didn't have any clies about it, now I do!
At the espírito santo there are some cities where the official language is pomeranian, a dialect of German spoken in ancient Pomerania ( Region between Germany and Poland)
That's cool! I love when minority languages are official, this way they develop and will most likely stay in use.
Nice video, greeatings from Brodowski-SP/Brazil ❤️❤️ also in some parts of Brazil(south/southeast regions) people speak pomeranian
Thank you!
Pomeranian 😲. I was unaware of that language
@@VSvimalkumar Exist in north east of Germany
@@hyenalaughingmatter8103 😲
@@VSvimalkumar It is a West Slavic language, Brazil has the largest number of Pomeranian speakers in the world, as in Germany and Poland it almost disappeared. Today there are about 300,000 Pomeranians in Brazil, they are the last Pomeranian communities in the world, they came during the second world war, and never returned to their region. (departs today from Poland and Germany).
The star above the white stripe in the flag represented the only state that at the time had a part of its territory above the Equator
Thank you!
The star above the letters represents the state of Amazonas
In fact, Brazilian Portuguese is practically identical to Portuguese from portugal, it just changes the accent, it would be something like the English of UK and the US
Interesting! But if you think about it, British and American English are different, not only accent-wise, still they are mutually intelligible, so I got what you mean.
@@SeagulltheExplorer yes, some words may be a little different but it does not interfere with communication, Portuguese and Brazilians communicate without difficulties, Portuguese in Portugal is usually much more formal and Brazilians are more relaxed.
excellent video congratulations from Brasil🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
THE STAR that is above the Motto in our flag represent s the state of Roraima which is the only state whose capital is in the northern hemesphere.
Much love from Brazil!
I've heard about all the troubles your people has had with Lukashenko. I hope you figure it all out the best way. God bless you.
Thank you! Let's hope it will happen soon.
The star above is the state of Pará
A estrela acima da faixa representa o estado de Roraima, o único estado brasileiro cuja capital está localizada acima da linha do equador
8:15 actually, the "Rio 'jay' Janeiro" is how people of that state speak, some parts speak like every other person in the world because the "D" sound.
Good to know, thank you!
BULLSH!T. Now even the heavy accent from people in the state makes it nearly sound like 'JAY'. Seagull's pronunciation is legit.
The "bolacha or biscoito war" is a joke. Don't take it seriously...
Yeah, at first I thought it was true, he was too serious about it, but then I got it. :)
@@SeagulltheExplorer😂😂😂
Can you do Portugal in the future ? , love your videos
Great suggestion! I will make a reaction video about Portugal too! And thank you, I am glad you like my videos!
excellent reaction, i´m from Colombia...it would be great a reaction about geography now Colombia :)
Thank you! I am taking some time off from reaction videos for now, but when I come back I will surelly watch the Colombian video too!
if you put Portuguese subtitles, you can get a lot of views of the brasilians
I wish I could speak Portuguese to do that...
I don't even Know that this Hunsrik existed
I am glad I shared some new knowledge!
Pelo menos até onde me lembro era representação de Brasília
One of the extinct languages of Brazil happens to be the “Brazilian common” that people of today have no idea what it sounds languages. The Brazilian common was a mixture of Tupi, guarani, Portuguese and African dialects spoken during the colonial period of Brazil. The language became extinct after the Portuguese court moved to Brazil escaping the Napoleon war!
Oh wow! I had no idea about this language! Thank you for sharing!
It's actually pronounced Rio de Janeiro, and not Rio jay Janeiro.
So I guess I am pronouncing it correctly, good to know, thank you!
minha nossa você se lembra mais das atrizes do que eu
Bem, eles ficaram presos na minha cabeça porque eu assistia muitos episódios dos programas de TV brasileiros. :)
Unfortunately only data on native languages is accurate in Brazil as the last census which asked about non-native languages was the 1950 census. I think it's unlikely 5% of Brazilians speak a language other than portuguese at home, as in 1950 it wasn't that high and it had been in stark decline in comparison to the 1940 census, which is a trend that probably continued with urbanization and the end of the mass migration era. The number of speakers of German, Italian and Japanese, which are all guesstimates, are, I think, grossly exaggerated - the estimations of 3m speakers of German dialects for example implies a massive growth on the usage of that language since 1950 which is wildly unlikely just by looking at the population growth of the regions where speakers of those languages were concentrated, even ignoring the factor of assimilation.
Thank you for your comment, but I just gave the numbers from Ethnologue, they usually try to give reliable data, so I ususally believe them. If their sources are wrong, I am sorry.
😂😂👏👏🇧🇷🇧🇷😎!!
I am from "rio grande do Norte" here there is a different desert and we are very hungry and thirsty here it is terrible
I am very sorry to hear that! I hope everything will change for the better for you.
@@SeagulltheExplorer He is probably talking about the "sertão" which is a region in the northeast of the country predominantly arid and semi-arid, which goes through long periods of drought and only receives rains during the beginning of the year, since the seasons are not well defined when you are just below the equator and far from the coast.
This is also an interesting topic and affects many people living in the region, although it's something that can be handled in most urban areas where resources are more accessible.
Actually by the way its SOCCER, Soccer is an brittish word and was used to seperate themselfs from irish football... And the united states isnt the only english speaking country that calls it SOCCER, canada, south africa, australia, new zealand. I suggest actually researching instead of generalizing or making stuff up
What did I make up? Although the name came from the UK, there the sport is called football. And I didn't know if only the US call it 'soccer', that's why I asked the question. You don't need to be mean when commenting on something, it is normal for people to not know something.
1)Brazilians understand 100% of portuguese from Portugal. ( We only find It funny...) 2) Indian languages in Brazil are spoken maximum by 0,000000001 % of the population ( almost nobody) PS: I'm Brazilian since 1967...
I guess it is a stereotype or perhaps some Brazilians or Portuguese said they didn't understand some words or phrases or a particular accent.
@@SeagulltheExplorer I understand, but It's really not true. Portuguese from Portugal is completely understandable by brazilians... Even the most different or fast way of talking is easily understood by brazilians... ( By the way, we brazilians understand almost 90% also of spanisch speakers, but the contrary is not so true... Especially Spain native speakers.)👍
@@fernandoroza6061 Ok, good to know! I think I mentioned it because some of my Brazilian friends mentioned it but perhaps I misunderstood something. Thank you for your insight!
@@SeagulltheExplorer ✌🏻
OLÁ SENHORA DE ISRAEL, COMO A SENHORIA ESTÁ? DESCULPE, MAS TEM PARTES EM SEU COMENTÁRIO NÃO BATE,EU SOU NETO DE PORTUGUESES ,EU VOU DISCORDAR DA SENHORA NOSSA SEGUNDA LÍNGUA NÃO É O ESPANHOL, SÓ FALA O ESPANHOL NO BRASIL,QUEM VEM DE FORA, NOSSO VIZINHOS DA LÍNGUA ESPANHOLA, NEM O PORTUGUÊS FORMAL, NÃO FALAMOS O PORTUGUÊS DE PORTUGAL, NOSSA LÍNGUA E A LÍNGUA BRASILEIRA,TEMOS MUITAS VARIANTES DA LÍNGUA ,NÃO CONFIE EM LIVROS QUE ACEITA TUDO,VEM PESSOALMENTE VISITAR O BRASIL É VERÁS QUÊ A MAIORIA DE SEUS ESTUDOS FOI TAPEADA ,EM RELAÇÃO OS ALEMÃES TAMBÉM É UM EQUÍVOCO NA SUAS ANÁLISES, ESTUDE HISTÓRIAS DO BRASIL NO TH-cam TEM MUITAS VERDADES ,DESCULPE FOI SÓ UM ESCLARECIMENTOS,ATÉ A PRÓXIMA VEZ.
Slava Ukraine