Lingusitics Do you think the portuguese language a romantic language?

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The discussion centers around perceptions of various languages and their romantic qualities. Brazilian Portuguese is questioned for its romantic sound compared to Spanish and European Portuguese. French is often cited as the most romantic language due to its soft phonetics, despite some personal preferences ranking Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian higher. Experiences with language teachers highlight the importance of proper pronunciation, particularly in French, where mispronunciations can lead to frustration. The conversation also touches on the classification of languages, noting that Portuguese, Spanish, French, and Italian are all Romance languages derived from Latin. Ultimately, the romantic quality of a language is subjective and influenced by individual experiences and preferences.
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My natural idiom is the brazilian-portuguese, so, I don't know to say if the my idiom sounds romantic (like espanish and portuguese-portuguese) or not... What do you think?

As says a dictation in pt:
"Grama na mão dos outros é sempre mais verde do que na nossa."
 
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I think French is the most romantic sounding, it's just soft sounding. Nothing to do with the French people. My mother was French and hated the French.

Oddly, in elementary school, they hired a teacher from Brazil to teach Spanish, needless to say, it was a shock, having had Mexican teachers previously, we were all left scratching our heads. It's not the same. She was teaching Portugese.

The worst language experience was in 10th grade, they didn't have a French language teacher, so assigned some woman that had no clue to teach. I dropped out after the second class when she didn't know how to pronounce the month of August, Août, she decided it was pronounced "out". I told her she was wrong, she disagreed. :eek: If a teacher doesn't know the subject, they should at least check.
 
I don't think french sounds romantic, for me, the most romanitcs are: 1st spanish, 2nd portuguese and 3rd italian. I don't think that enligsh sounds romantic too, but the english music are certainly the best, no doubt!
 
Lol, of course it all boils down to personal preference. French is usually considered the most romantic language though.

http://french.about.com/gi/pages/poll.htm?linkback=http%3A%2F%2Ffrench.about.com%2Fb%2F2014%2F02%2F08%2Fpoll-what-is-the-most-romantic-language.htm&poll_id=4091408512&poll=1

I'd have to say German is one of the harshest sounding languages.
 
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Evo said:
Lol, of course it all boils down to personal preference. French is usually considered the most romantic language though.

http://french.about.com/gi/pages/poll.htm?linkback=http%3A%2F%2Ffrench.about.com%2Fb%2F2014%2F02%2F08%2Fpoll-what-is-the-most-romantic-language.htm&poll_id=4091408512&poll=1

I'd have to say German is one of the harshest sounding languages.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlATOHGj9EY&feature=kp http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlATOHGj9EY&feature=kp

I :!) Germans!
 
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Leibniz said that german is language for speak with horse, kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
All their articles was written in Latin or French.

Look this portugue music


and this italian
 
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OMG, the German video was so funny!
 
I liked the video. German language sounds like they are pissed off haha
 
Evo said:
The worst language experience was in 10th grade, they didn't have a French language teacher, so assigned some woman that had no clue to teach. I dropped out after the second class when she didn't know how to pronounce the month of August, Août, she decided it was pronounced "out". I told her she was wrong, she disagreed. :eek: If a teacher doesn't know the subject, they should at least check.

There are three different ways to pronounce août that I commonly hear and "out" is one of them.
 
  • #10
GabDX said:
There are three different ways to pronounce août that I commonly hear and "out" is one of them.

There is no correct pronunciation of the French language. However you might pronounce something, someone will tell you it's wrong.
 
  • #11
GabDX said:
There are three different ways to pronounce août that I commonly hear and "out" is one of them.
I'm French and I've never heard it pronounced as anything other than OOT. I'm referring to the correct french pronunciation, I'm sure some people mispronounce it.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdPCM85mWCQ




and here

http://www.forvo.com/word/août/

and here

http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/août#Pronunciation
 
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  • #12
I'm a Québecois and I've heard a-ou, ou and oute. I would say 'ou' is the most common pronunciation here. When you said 'out' I thought you meant 'oute', like in the examples you posted.
 
  • #13
GabDX said:
I'm a Québecois and I've heard a-ou, ou and oute. I would say 'ou' is the most common pronunciation here. When you said 'out' I thought you meant 'oute', like in the examples you posted.
Ah, I was wondering how bad it was up in Canada, not as bad as I thought. We have people in the US with such bad slang that there are joke dictionaries like Texan to English. :-p

No, that woman was telling us it was pronounced *owt*, like in owl.
 
  • #14
lisab said:
I :!) Germans!
The video is rather amusing.

I suppose one's perception is affected by enunciation, or vocalization. Certainly, the German would sound different if it were spoken somewhat more softly, or perhaps by the same woman who speaks the French.
 
  • #15
Technically Spanish is the most widely spoken Romance language with Portuguese second and French third :-p
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romance_languages

As a more serious answer IMO French (especially a French accent!) is the most romantic :!)
 
  • #16
I personally believe that there is really no such thing as a "romantic" language. Whether a language is romantic or not depends heavily on the specific speaker and the context in which is spoken.

As an aside, please note I mean "romantic" as being about love/romance. Of course, Portuguese, along with Spanish, French, Italian, etc., are Romance languages, i.e. languages evolved from Vulgar (i.e. vernacular) Latin.
 
  • #17
StatGuy2000 said:
As an aside, please note I mean "romantic" as being about love/romance. Of course, Portuguese, along with Spanish, French, Italian, etc., are Romance languages, i.e. languages evolved from Vulgar (i.e. vernacular) Latin.

Yes I got that. Hence why I included the emoticon to indicate my response was light hearted.
 
  • #18
  • #19
1. French
2. Spanish
3. Arabic
 
  • #20
Portuguese doesn't sound romantic to me. There are 3 languages that sound romantic imo - Italian, Spanish and French.
 

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