An online Portuguese dictionary featuring general vocabulary and terms from key scientific and technical fields. The DPLP highlights spelling and usage differences between European and Brazilian Portuguese.
Portuguese learning tool featuring common words and phrases, along with thousands of user-contributed translations from English to Portuguese.
The Syntax of Portuguese
by
Mary A. Kato; Ana Maria Martins
Portuguese is the second most spoken Romance language in the world, and due to recent interest in comparative syntax, the literature on its syntax has increased exponentially, resulting in exciting discoveries of a range of aspects that have hitherto been overlooked. This book provides a theoretically grounded overview of the major syntactic properties of Portuguese, focusing on the differences between European and Brazilian Portuguese. It shows from a theoretical point of view how different syntactic properties are interconnected by comparing and contrasting the variances between pronominal and agreement systems, null subjects, null complements, and word order. It also highlights how small differences in the specification of syntactic properties may yield quite different dialects. It introduces key theoretical points without technical jargon, making the content accessible to specialist and non-specialists alike. It is essential reading for both academic researchers and students of Portuguese language, comparative syntax, Romance linguistics, and theoretical syntax.
This collection includes digitized works of great Portuguese literature, such as Almeida Garrett, Eça de Queirós, Vitorino Nemésio, Antonio Feliciano de Castilho, Florbela Espanca, and Romulo de Carvalho.
The Ripple Effect: gender and race in Brazilian culture and literature
by
Maria José Somerlate Barbosa
In The Ripple Effect: Gender and Race in Brazilian Culture and Literature, Barbosa adopts a comparative, multilayered, and interdisciplinary line of research to examine social values and cultural mores from the first decades of the twentieth century to the present. By analyzing the historical, cultural, religious, and interactive space of Brazil?s national identity, The Ripple Effect surveys expressive cultures and literary manifestations. It uses the martial art-dance-ritual capoeira as a lynchpin to disclose historical ambiguities and the negotiation of cultural and literary boundaries within the context of the ideological construct of a mestizo nation. The book also examines laws governing gender in Brazil and discusses honor killings and other types of violence against women. The Ripple Effect appraises the contributions that some iconic female figures have made to the development of Brazil?s distinctive cultural and literary production. Drawing on more than fifteen years of field, archival, and scholarly research, this work offers new interpretative venues, and broadens the critical focus and the methodological scope of previous scholarship. It reveals how literature and other arts can be used to document cultural norms, catalog life experiences, and analyze complex constructions of social values, ideas, and belief systems.
Provides complete bibliographic citations to the contents of scholarly journals published around the world on Latin America and the Caribbean since 1970. Coverage includes everything from political, economic, and social issues to the arts and humanities.
Provides scholarly literature in the natural sciences, social sciences, engineering, and arts and humanities published in leading open access journals from Latin American, Portugal, Spain, and South Africa.
Portugal's largest library collects, processes, and preserves the nation's bibliographic heritage, making it accessible to the intellectual and scientific community.