The last part of the video: "a computer voice speaking Portuguese with a Portugal's accent" in a video talking about Brazilians. That's much more controversial for Brazilians. Hahaha
MarcioNSantos I swear I only got "Joanna e eu" and I couldn't recognize the rest of those words. Yep, Portuguese is my first language, but I don't know which language people from Portugal speak.
Man, I've been to Lisbon and I SWEAR TO GOD it got to a point I wanted people to speak English to me - and yes, I'm Brazilian too. Worst part tho? They understand EVERY SINGLE WORD we say.
Nós, brasileiros, não nos consideramos latinos pq existe um cantor chamado Latino e todos nós temos vergonha dele. Brazilian people don't consider themselves as latin because we have a singer called Latino and we doesn't like him.
Sandro Macena kkkkkkkkkk... Eu gosto de ser considerada latina.. ingleses amam latinhas aí quando eu falo com um boy eu digo que sou brasileira latina kkkk
responde que alguns linguistas defendem essa teoria de que existe sim uma "língua brasileira" mas por enquanto, oficialmente, ainda falamos português kkkk
As a Brazilian I must say I didn’t use to consider myself latino. After I traveled to other countries in Latin America and also met other latinos outside of our continent I started considering myself as one. Jorge Drexler, the Uruguayan singer, was one my biggest influences while finding that out.
Same here! Specially when I went to Europe last year I figured out I’m latino. I feel much more connected with our continent now ❤️ Obs.: I’m going to Argentina in next week! 😊
I'm an American living in Brazil....so let's see how my take on this goes... My wife is brazilian, carioca da gema, and she says that honestly she never really thought about it. Most Brazilians just think of themselves as Brazilian. But she does say that she is Latina, she sees the meaning of the word and understands that it applies to her(she lives in latin America, she speaks a romance language, and she is a descendant of Italians and Portuguese) so she says that she is Latina, but doesn't care or think about the term. I think most brazilians feel a similar way, they recognize that they are Latino but don't care enough to include that in their identity, they're just... brazilian
Aknight292 well, as it fucking happens EVERYWHERE! Italians identify themselves as italians, mexicans as mexicans and chinese as chinese. Your comment is so dumb.
why are u being rude? he just said that because in the video she said that brazilians don't see themselves as latinos... so he's just trying to say that ACTUALLY nobody fucking cares and we are talkin about brazil, not about china, mexico or italy chill
I'm from the Philippines and we're Asian who have Spanish/Chinese last names, look Malay, speak a whole bunch of gazillion dialects and our primary language are Filipino and English. We are like Latin America's unknown cousin who never gets invited to anything. And also, I love you.
You are our lost cousins, who speak a funny dialect in some areas (chavacano), and a total different thing in others. At the end of the day, you are part of the family, mate.
Fatmah Dell'Aglio I'd like to know more about Indonesians but apart from your native people potentially looking like afro-Brazilians or most Indonesians looking like some indigenous tribes in the north of Brazil. I wouldn't say in general Brazilians and Indonesians look the same. Most Brazilians have a certain degree of mixed but normally in between different types of European background , middle East background or African background or mixed in between both. There's some other mixes with Asians but that's minority. But as we say, literally any human being in the world could be Brazilian, there isn't as many countries as diverse racially as Brazil is.
Se for pesquisa afundo o inglês vc tb achará uma boa parte que se deriva do latim então se fosse pela língua quem fala inglês TB poderiam ser considerados latinos
não podemos ser caracterizados pelo idioma. E sabe porque esta tese de "ser latino" cai por terra? Porque se tu for levar em consideração que os "americanos originais" ( de sangue puramente americano) são indígenas, logo não seriamos latinos. Ou seja , não podemos ser caracterizados pelo idioma e muito menos por sangue.
What you said about the Philippines is on point. We do have Spanish names since we were colonized by Spaniards. Some of us also speak broken Spanish and even our days, months, numbers, utensils and how we curse are all in spanish😂 the music, culture and a whole lot more are in spanish so yeah 😂 saludos desde Filipinas🇵🇭
Verdade se é pra falar da língua de um país pelo menos pesquise mais qual é a variedade de língua que tem nesse país. É um erro grave usar português de Portugal pra falar do português do Brasil e também é um grande erro falar da língua portuguesa usando o português do Brasil . Me poupe 😐
@@RafaelSantos-tu1yx não???? Existem definições pra tudo isso, latinos, asiáticos, europeus, eles não queriam se separar do "lixo", cada coisa tem um nome
Brazil is a Latin country because it was colonized by Latin people, Portuguese is a Latin language, as well as Spanish, Italian and French! Brazil's cultural heritage is Portuguese, but not only, because it's also African (black), Italian, German, Spanish (white), asian (Japanese), and native indian... plus Brazilians keep on assimilating other cultures such as English, and the USA culture!
Brazil was colonized by the Latin people called Portuguese, other Latin and non-Latin people immigrated to Brazil and integrated with the nation causing an impact on the mainstream culture!
For those of you who don't know or haven't noticed, I'm not talking as a foreigner, I'm a Brazilian! If you've haven't been here long enough or at least studied a bit of history, it's obvious you don't know what I'm saying!
because of also cultural reasons, no, quebec and other french speaking in canada aren't latino. and let me see if i understood, you're talking about the states in the sunbelt that were mexican territory should be considered latino? well, partially i guess, but i'd assume isolated communities, since english is predominant.
As an Argentinian, I must say: The problem is not who is consider Latino or not. Argentinians, Brazilians, Mexicans, and everybody else is indeed Latino, just because we all speak Latin languages. The problem is in the way that people use it. Tell me: How many times have you heard the word Latino to specifically speak about something related to the origin of their languages? Just a few. It is used just as a way to make a difference between Canadá, United States, and almost every other American country below the US. And that's a very big problem. As Joanna said, some of us just do not share basically anything but language between some others. For example, both Argentina and Colombia are Latino and also South American countries. But, as an Argentinian, I can say that I've never in my life eaten chica, tamal or even arepa. Furthermore, I've never met a Colombian. On the other hand, I feel exactly the opposite feeling with Uruguay, a country that basically shares almost all cultures with mine. That is why sometimes some of us may feel a little bit uncomfortable when we are called Latino. It is not something about trying to feel superior or some bullshit like that. It is about that we literally do not feel Latino as it is usually used. (Please, forgive my level of English, it is obviously not my first language).
*Traducido al español* Como argentino debo decir: El problema no está en quién cosideremos o no como latinol. Argentinos, brasileños, mexicanos y todos los demás somos latinos, tan sólo por el hecho de hablar lenguajes de origen latino. El problema está en el modo de uso que tienen estas palabras. Decime: ¿Cuántas veces escuchaste la palabra Latino con el fin de hablar acerca del origen de sus lenguas? Muy pocas. Realmente es utilizado a modo de marcar una diferencia entre Canadá, Estados Unidos, y basicamente cualquier otro país al sur de EEUU. Y ese es un problema muy grave. Tal como Joanna dijo, muchos de nosotros no compartimos casi nada a excepción del lenguaje con algunos países. Por ejemplo: Tanto Argentina como Colombia son países latinos, e incluso ambos son países sud-americanos. Pero, como Argentino puedo decir que en mi vida probe ni la chicha, ni un tamal, ni nisiquiera una arepa. Y es que hasta incluso en mi vida conocí a un colombiano en persona. Por lo contrario, me siento totalmente al revés con Uruguay, país con el que casi compartimos toda nuestra cultura. Esa es la razón del porqué algunas veces algunos de nosotros nos sentimos un tanto incómodos cuando nos llaman latinos. No es nada acerca de tratarse de sentirse superior o alguna estupidez así. Es tan sólo que literalmente no nos identificanos como latinos en la forma que normalmente se utiliza esa palabra.
Hey I’m from Canada! By the way your English is perfectly fine, I understood everything. I think certain people when they say they are not Latino normally everyone else would think it’s because they don’t want to be part of it but now I understand a lot better, thank you for your insight! And it’s true the origins are all Latin. In my area we speak French, which is vulgar Latin origin. It makes me feel like everything is connected hahahaha
We focus so much in our differences that we forget our similarities. I'm Venezuelan and Argentina feels like home to me. Lived in other places before but Argentina won my heart. I'm actually typing this while eating facturas 😆
So, why we from south america are called latinos because we are from latin america and the US citizens are not called the anglos that come from Anglo-america?? Hmmmm...
Fácil de responder. Sou Americano 🇺🇸 e Brasileiro 🇧🇷. O nome oficial do Brasil é, Republica Federativa do Brasil, nós não deviamos ser chamados Brasileiros e sim Brasilianos ou Brasilienses, o termo Brasileiro vem to tempo Brasil Colonia e era um termo que os Portugueses usavam pra descrever quem era da Colonia mas era utilizado de uma forma negativa, quem explica bem isso é o Peninha do Canal Buenas Ideias. Passando pro Americano. O nome official dos Estados Unidos é United States of AMERICA, (Estados Unidos da America). O termo Gentilico oficial fica Sendo American. Não tem como dizer Estado-Unidense em inglês, eu vivo em New York, todos aqui tem consciencia que há mais America doque essa America 🇺🇸, nós não quizemos Tomar o termo Americano somente para nós, é que realmente não tem como ser de outra forma. Também aqui não é inteiramente composto somente de descendentes Saxões, grande parte dos Estados Unidos pertenceu a França por um determinado periodo, outra parte pertencia a Espanha, é uma parte inclusive à Russia, ao Norte, todos esses territorios foram agregados mãos tarde por compras, através de guerras, anexos. As 13 primeiras colônias sim eram de fato anglo-saxônicas, porém os Estados Unidos possuem outros povos que formam a nação Americana. Aliás, se você pensa na palavra "ESTADOS" nos Estados Unidos, lembre-se que cada Estado age independentemente, como se cada um fosse um pequeno país, as leis são completamente diferentes, tem Estados com pena de morte, outros onde todas as drogas não descriminalizadas, outros onde você pode ter porte de arma e andar com ela na cintura porá onde queira, tem Estados onde casino é permitido, outros não. Portando todos os Estados independentes da América fica utilizando o termo Gentilico AMERICAN (Americano). Fez sentido?
Because the Anglos living in the USA happen to be a very racist bunch and they are quick to come up with ways to group others together so that they themselves can come across less racists and don't have to learn about people from different cultures. Hispanics as you see don't waste as much time worrying about what other countries are doing and welcome everyone regardless of background.
Dênis Alves exatamente, é o q eu vivo dizendo... Se parar pra pensar os próprios falantes da língua inglesa são meio latinos, já q ela teve influencia do Latim.... O negocio é que eles adoram usar essa palavra de forma pejorativa e se acham os deuses do universo porque são "americanos", grandes porcarias né, tbm sou americana, os argentinos são, os canadenses tbm são... Enfim... Por isso q eu odeio essa definição de latino.... É só mais uma forma deles tentarem rebaixar as pessoas....
The latino identity started to mean a lot more to me once I left Uruguay. Chances of finding other Uruguayans are very low, however, the little parts that we have in common with the rest of Latin America made me feel at home even if I couldn't eat Mexican food without dying from the spice or I couldn't make a single salsa move. So yeah, the term was impose by the U.S but the feeling and connection is beautiful
i felt the same going from brazil to the us, we brazilians have much more in common with other latinos than we like to admit, and as i have seen brazilians tend to form a community apart from the others. however in europe brazilians tend to commute a lot more with other latinos, there are even latino parties where you can only attend if you are latino or with latinx people
Awww! Your story kinda makes my heart ache a little! I'm from Mexico and I met an Uruguayan family not long ago while on vacation in Argentina. It turned out that they actually lived in Northern Mexico (were merely vacationing in Buenos Aires as well) and decided to approach me when they heard my Mexican Spanish because it was familiar to them. Although the parents had a very strong Uruguayan accent, their 15 year-old son was practically Mexican; he spoke just like me. It was such a heart warming moment. Your experience also reminds me a bit of the few years I spent in the States. I lived in an almost exclusively white area and the very few other Mexican Americans or US born Latinos I knew didn't really speak Spanish (or wouldn't speak it), so I was adopted by the only group of immigrant kids in my school who all happened to be South Americans (mostly Chileans, Argentinians and Brazilians). They were my total life savers! Uruguay is such a small country (but the people have the biggest hearts!) and it's so far away. I can only imagine how excited you get when you meet a fellow Uruguayan while abroad!
Paula L your comment is probably the most accurate. All people in Latin America relate to their nationality when they live at home. There isn't a need to connect to others. But other cultures are different and when you move, you want to relate more and more to people who are similar to you. That's where the 'latino' term gains new meaning.
O brasileiro no geral torce o nariz para a América latina, o termo latino foi "pejorativizado" pelos norte americanos, tachando como sendo aquele cara pequenino, que fala fino, com bigode grande, olhos puxados, feições meio indígenas e que fala espanhol. Por isso muitas pessoas não gostam do termo, inclusive eu. Me considero brasileiro e sul americano, eu não saio por aí chamando um norte americano de "anglo-saxão-americano" só porque ele mora na América anglo-saxônica e fala o inglês ou um italiano de "latino-europeu" só porque ele mora na europa latina e fala uma língua derivada do latim. Quero ser reconhecido pela minha nacionalidade e não pelo termo usado para definir falantes de tal família linguistica como eslavos, germânicos, celtas, latinos, gregos, bálticos, o que seja. Se é pra definir latino, só quem vive do México pra baixo, é melhor chamar todo mundo que fala língua românica de latino também, sem distinções. Minha opinião ✌🏻
e brasileiro não é latino como expressado no vídeo... vizinhos e com bom relacionamento e só... Matriz de formação TOTALMENTE diferentes... Caramba a que se respeitar os aspectos históricos! Fomos parte de um reino extra continental! Herdeiros dos lusos... rs Paz e Bem.
Geographically, there are three Americas: North, Central and South. So Brazil is a South American country Linguistically, Brazil speaks Portuguese, a Latin language, so it is a Latin American country. Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and French are Latin languages, so even the French region of Canada is Latin.
Culturally, no one considers French Canada as part of Latin America, but Brazil also has a different culture from its neighboring countries If you agree that French Canada should not be included in Latin America because of a cultural difference, but you think Brazil is included because to Americans it is an "exotic" country, it only shows how "Latin" is a biased term for refer to culture and race
Quebec Province is administered by an Anglo government (English Speaking). Thus, it really isn't a Latin country. Miami is one of the most 'Latin' cities in the Western Hemisphere, all while not being a part of Latin America. Brazil is a Latinoamericano country. Though, most Brazilians are black or mixed with African, there are considerable numbers of Europeans and Mestizos (Mesticos) in Brasil.
@Isaias Ribeiro Are Jamaicans Anglo for that matter? What is the cultural and social difference between Brazil and Angola? To say you are Latino in the social sense of the term means to say you are actually Latin, or have ancestors coming from Latin Europe and your current culture is an historic link to them. It's the same for Anglos in Canada and America with their ancestors. Many Brazilians are either black or mixed with African and now want to identify more with a distinct culture...but that does not take away the fact that there are tens-of-millions of white or mixed Brazilians that do have ancestors from Latin Europe (Portuguese, Italians, Spaniards)...and they most definitely look and relate closer to people in Argentina, Uruguay, or Chile, than they do some people that live in the favelas in their country! So, to answer you...are Haitians Latino? It depends...if they have French ancestors and have adopted their ways, they are....which many have not, and do not have French ancestry! French don't do vodou, and were driven out before widespread colonies were established! In fact, many Hatians relate closer to Africa, as some Brazilians do. It can be said the same for indigenous peoples in Latin America as well. Being Latin has an historic heritage as it does racial context. Latin ancestors founded Latin America, their descendants still speak their language, practice Christianity, and inherited their values! Please understand my last three sentences, as they are most important!
@@emanuellemaria7173 Your observation is just not based on factual statistics then. We must fight about thinking with our emotions rather than our heads please... Factoring the Black and Pardo population, clearly they made up the majority of the Brazilian population from the 2010 Census. What do you think are the odds they will outpace the growth of White Brazilians in 2020? You are not trying to argue that Brazil is just as White as Uruguay or Argentina, are you? Sure, the south region has many European descendants, but the nation as a whole is not a White nation.
Brasileños son Brasileños porque nacen en Brasil. Brasileños son Americanos porque viven en el continente Americano. Brasileños son Sudamericanos porque viven en Sudamérica. Brasileños son Latinoamericanos porque son parte de Latinoamérica.
Latino porque se supone Castellano, Portuguese, Frances, Catalan ect bienen del Latin? Falso... Bienen de Las lenguas romances. Latino? Para quienes hablan Latin...los curas y elite( Reyes, duques ect). Es el idioma que crearon los curas...jamas el Pueblo(plebello) hablo Latin en España, Portugal, Francia ect No somos Latinos. SOMOS SUR AMERICANOS
@@luisureta7086 Los curas crearan el latin????? Eres evangelico tonto? Latin nacio en el Lascio, region de la peninsula italica varios seculos antes del cristianismo. Era el idioma del imperio romano.los idiomas derivados del latin vulgar son, italiano, frances, español,portugues, romance, catalan, gallego y romeno.
Of course we fought for it! For example, are you English or American? Because technically, Americans speak English but live in North America, so you consider yourself American, not British (You both speak the same language). The point I want to get is: your cultural heritage, it comes from the British Isles, but CULTURAL IDENTITY is American. Get it now? If I say, "Hi Brit," you're going to say, "I'm American." For the same reason, we fight about Brazilians being Latin or not. Ok?
Jeremy Vaz sorry 96% are european descendents. Maybe the most European country of All Americans. No stories about melting pot in Uruguay like in Brazil, US or Canada. Sorry.
@@pedrogallovieira7474 soy brasileño y me encanta el Uruguay. Me voy todos los años para allá y no me recuerdo haver visto gente negra allí. Jeremy Vaz ciertamente nunca estudió sobre el cisplatino y la ascendencia uruguaya.
A few facts about we Brazilians: - Yes, we are really self-centric. Our excuses for that: - Language barrier (except for few exceptions like Shakira, we do not listen or see any content in Spanish) actualy we are very isolated when it comes to media/music/famous people. - Size: we are so big that what matters for us is very local, because the local is already big. More isolation because of that. - History: Other countries had many wars to have their independence. Brazil got it's independence by a agreement between the Portuguese Emperor with his son, that was also Portuguese and after the became the Emperor of Brazil. So, we felt like we never broke the connect with Europe. So, I think that many Brazilians misunderstand the meaning of the words "latino/latin". We are just an isolated big country. But at least, not like in the US, we do not like to create specific words to put our neighbors from Latin America in the same basket. Yes, I condidered myself latino. For me, it's much more like a geographic definition.
MarcioNSantos I liked this concept and we totally understand you feel isolated, we're neighbors and yet we hear so little from you... Anyways, just wanted to let you know that although it is a geographical concept it is also a feeling, is nice to have Latinos everywhere.
More than a geographic definition, it has to do with the origin of the language you speak (Latin). The geographical part is the 'América' in 'Latin-America'. So yeah c;
Great. I just want to say that we are geographically isolated also. Until 30/40 years ago most of the interior (Mato Grosso/MS) was isolated and in the past, regions like the west of Santa Catarina was part of Paraguay territory. The only place (as I know) that have centuries of cultural exchange with our neighbors was Rio Grande do Sul.
No one really describes themselves as "latinos" outside of the US, right? It's more how Spanish/Portuguese speakers from the Americas are generalized in the US as one group (by non-latinos). French should be there too if you think Latin languages, but no one really thinks of French speakers as latinos. I guess some Brazilians reject the term because it's too associated with Spanish speakers ("hispanic"), but being just a dumb generalization it shouldn't mean anything. I'm Brazilian and I'm latino, how little or how much this description says about me is on you, not on me.
Matheus Torres you're wrong about people identifying as Latinos only in the US. All of us who live in foreign lands and come from Latin America osea Brazil included identify as Latinos cause we get to understandand and realise the many things we have in common and share. From an Hispanic point of view it starts with the language. Also Spanish and Portuguese are way more similar languages than French and Spanish. It's like Scandinavian even if the languages are different Norwegians can more or less understand Swedish (depending on if they speak bokmål or Nynorsk) but that's for another debate.
Matheus Torres in our respective countries people tend to identify more as just Brazilian or Mexican or Colombian etc. I grew up in another country as a kid I didn't really realised that, but growing up going to school with other Latinos, I was in a class with Brazilians, Colombians, Venezuelan, Mexican, Ecuadorian, Cuban-Americans etc really made us realise how much we had in common. We would listen to the same Latin rock bands, Latin pop singers like Thalia or Shakira the same reggaetoneros. They were also Spaniards, Portuguese so you know we were our own little community and we shared a culture and identity despite being from several different countries. There was just some "rivalry" between the Europeans and us the Latino Americans(teenage shit) I was in an international school , there was an English section Italian and German. It was really a great human experience. As a teen that's when I really started to identify more as Latino. Basically a lot of Mexicans think I'm Mexican when I'm like mega rolo cause I was surrounded by Mexico, the music the culture, the friends. And I was accidentally almost miscarriaged and then saved in Cuba so yeah I owe my life to Cubans, both parents Colombian, I had a Salvadoran stepdad and a Cuban stepdad. Sooooo yeah I kinda don't identify as just Colombian. But more as Latino. And you know people who still live in the motherland say we're French (grew up in France) or wherever we got to grew up. But I feel like I had a richer experience and a more vivid sense of what it is to be Latino and never disconnected. And growing up in Europe never made me less Colombian/Latino. Honestly French don't consider Latino, the term is more associated with the Americas and French Canadian don't identify as Latino. It's really interesting. Cause what about Suriname or Belize or Caribbean islands where they speak Dutch or English. They're not Hispanic, they're not Latinos but they have a shit ton in common with other places nearby. So even if the term comes from languages derived from Latin it also englobes cultures that have similar roots located in the Americas. And every person who is descended from a Latino regardless of what language they speak
Im Brazilian & im NOT Latino... Doesn't matter what was the origin of the term (came from Latin bla, bla, bla), but I know that Americans use it to identify Spanish speakers as in a job interview for example. Brasileiros não são Latinos! 🇧🇷
Her explanation of Latino is wrong, Latino America bc we speak a language that comes from Latim, italians, french, spains, are also Latino! Americans that are kind ignorant hahaha
Cada um se classifica como quiser, mas o mundo sempre vai ver a gente como latinos. Estados Unidos da América - Americanos. Canadá - Canadenses Estados Unidos Mexicanos - Mexicanos. México e Canadá ficam na América do Norte e não são chamados de Norte Americano. Aparentemente pra alguns de vcs, ser chamado de americano é ter status ao redor do mundo. Aceitem que são apenas brasileiros visto como latinos mesmo estando na América do sul 😉
I don't believe in humans não moça você entendeu errado, eu falo que sou "americana" pq eu moro, nasci na América do sul, a mesma coisa que você falar que um sul africano que nasceu no continente da africa, mas nasceu na África do Sul, não pode ser chamado de africano, sacas? nacionalidade é uma coisa. Eu tenho um orgulho enorme de dizer que sou brasileira e descendente de nativos, nunca vou negar minha origem, mas o fato que nos vivemos na América do sul e não podemos ser chamados de americanos pq não somos é um pouco burro não acho? pq somos sim sul americanos, chamem nos como quiser. Não ligo de ser chamada de latina, mas a ignorância deles a apenas se reviravolta a nós da América do sul de latino é gigante, e isso vem com uma conotação totalmente diferente as vezes com uma imagem de que nos menosprezam, mas depois estão aí babando ovo para Italianos, Espanhóis ou portugueses sem nem sequer saber a origem e o porquê somos chamados de latinos, muita ignorancia!
Yeah.. We're Latinos. There is absolutely no controversy about that. Just some people who really don't know geography and/or people who think less of their neighbors. I'm Latino and I'm very proud of my heritage AND my brothers from Latin America, even though we have different culture, history and etc. We all have the same basic problem: Some stupid people from other countries invaded us, killed a bunch of our people and called themselves "civilized" and "explorers" and other fancy excuses to kill us, rob us, rape us and enslave us.
França e Canadá são latinos então? França é um país com cultura derivada do latim e fica na América pelo menos uma parte do país, então faz parte da América Latina não? Canadá tem cultura derivada da França o que eu acabei de falar, como América Latina engloba o México e outros países da América do Norte então Canadá também faz parte da América Latina. Se a sua definição é que tem que ser massa contínua de terra então a América do Sul não é Latina pois não é conectada com a do Norte, sem falar de países insulares.... O problema é identidade étnica, se você se considera Latino tudo bem, se não também ótimo, ser ou não latino tem que partir de você, colocar etiquetas de identificação nos outros não é legal.
Meu deus do céu, gente. Usem o Google! América Latina engloba todos os países do México pra baixo, é uma questão puramente geográfica. Não sei de onde o indivíduo tira que Canadá tá na América Latina. E não tem a ver com idioma. Sim, brasileiros são latinos.
@@ThalesMullerBR Volte para a escola e aprenda que existe um território inteiro maior que vários estados brasileiros na América do Sul que pertence a França.
É incrível como as pessoas aceitam, tão conformadas, essa terminologia inventada pelos EUA, a qual é claramente racista. A localização geográfica não nos torna latinos, principalmente porque esse termo (que eles inventaram) na verdade não arremete a uma localização geográfica, mas sim à uma condição social. Só não enxerga que não quer. Basicamente o q eles queriam era classificar um grupo q englobasse todas as pessoas de pele mais escura e que falassem espanhol, principalmente por razões xenofóbicas. Não é a toa q muitos estadunidenses consideram filipinos como latinos, apesar do país estar localizado na Ásia. Aliás, o próprio termo "hispânico" só foi criado depois que o termo "latino" foi considerado visivelmente racista e pejorativo, sob o pressuposto de designar pessoas de "língua materna espanhola e de origem no continente americano". E adivinhem: segundo a classificação deles O BRASILEIRO É HISPÂNICO. Mesmo falando PORTUGUÊS, para eles o brasileiro é hispânico. Ou seja, eles não estão nem aí para a língua q vc fala, para a sua hereditariedade ou para qualquer outro aspecto da sua cultura. Eles só estão preocupados em classificar todos, exceto eles próprios e Canadá, como um grupo de pessoas morenas oriundas d outras partes do continente americano. E as pessoas ainda acham q devemos nos considerar latinos porque estamos na "América Latina" e pq o tio Sam acha legal... tsc tsc tsc
O termo "América Latina" foi cunhado por Napoleão Bonaparte no início do século XIX ao se referir aos países recém independentes no continente americano que possuíam uma tradição latina, ou seja, que falam as línguas latinas (português, espanhol e francês) derivadas do latim, idioma falado no Império Romano. Portanto, não é um termo racista, pelo contrário, esse termo traz uma certa importância ao considerar que a nossa cultura latina é descendente da cultura dos romanos.
Matheus Leite Concordo contigo a respeito do plano de fundo da terminologia. Contudo, o que torna uma palavra racista não é a soma das letras contidas nela e sim a intenção de quem a diz. Eu me considero latino (sou descendente de espanhóis, portugueses e italianos), mas entendo que muitos brasileiros de tantas outras raízes não se considerem, simplesmente por não terem conexão com raízes latinas. Porém, se um estadunidense, ou quem quer que seja, me chamar de latino com desdém, eu arrebento a cara dele antes dele terminar a frase. E essa minha provável reação não tem nada a ver com a palavra em si, que é inofensiva e, dependendo do contexto, bem apropriada, mas sim com a intenção burra e alienada (muito comum nestes países que se acham the number one) de quem a disser.
E dai? É um termo que eles usam no pais deles. Esses termos não se aplicam aqui dentro. Os termos raciais no Brasil são ainda mais ridículos: branco, vermelho, pardo, amarelo, negro... e ainda é baseado na auto declaração. Pqp Hoje em dia é tudo racismo e mimimi...
I am american (I live in America, Brazil is part of America), I am south american and I am latino too, because the portuguese language is derived from Latin.
We're Latino since Brazil is located in Latin America! OMG, ppl, wtf? Maybe they don't understand that Latino doesn't mean Spanish speaking (Hispanics) but WE ARE LATINO! Deal with that.
Rayana Barros Hispanics doesn't mean Spanish speaking, it means Iberian Speaking, Iberia is a peninsula with Spain, Andorra and Yes, Portugal, so Brazilians are both Hispanic and Latino
According to the U.S Census a Hispanic is: "a person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or *other Spanish culture or origin* regardless of race."
We brasilians are LATINOS for sure! End of discussion! Not hispanics, of course... but Latinos since we born and live in Latin America! And I'm a proud latin woman. :)
You guys just swallow the term that the US use to non define you as American, someone who born in Europe is European, you guys born in south america, you guys ARE americans, the US just want to take themselves out the group and consider themselves superior “because i am american, best contry and so on”. We all are Americans since we born in the Americas, period!
I'm Filipino and, quite frankly, I find the Latin American culture(s) more relatable than the Asian culture(s). Even the language of my hometown has more Spanish words than Tagalog/Filipino, that's why Spanish was relatively easy for me to learn. There's also the question of whether or not Filipinos are Asians or Pacific Islanders... ¡Que complicado!
I find a lot of similarities between Filipinos and other Southeast Asians. The cuisines are very similar with the use of fish sauce and various dishes from lechon, egg rolls, balut, and fried rice are very much eaten. Filipinos speak languages similar to Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei and East Timor. Tagalog has a lot of vocabulary from English, Chinese, Hindi, and Malay too. Eating with your hands is a very Southeast Asian thing. Calling people auntie and uncle is such a Indonesian, Malaysian, Bruneian and Singaporean thing to do as well. When don't Southeast Asians give people weird nicknames.
ok technically we can be both since we are a pacific island nation in asia just like japan and taiwan and yeah we do relate more with latin A. cultures since we were colonized by spain for 300 years
One more reason why, technically, we Brazilians are Latinos: our language, Portuguese, much like Spanish, French and Italian, derives from latin, therefore making them all Latin-rooted languages = Latino languages [as, you know, the word "latino" in itself means latin www.nas.org/articles/Ask_a_Scholar_What_is_the_True_Definition_of_Latino] .
I guess what i meant is: if your mother language is a romance language, you're latino (at least that's how I see it). All the languages you cited are romance languages, with except of the english (wich you speak twice?)
No. I mean it. Portuguese is just another Spanish dialect that got a writing system and a dictionary, but it is the same language... it sounds weird but can understand everything. If you spoke correctly, we wouldn't even be having this discussion.
Latino is any country with a latin derived language. So, Portugal and Spain, Italy and others in Europe can be considered LATINO. From this perspective, Brazil IS latino. But if you consider LATINO as the racial/stereotypical view created in USA, then only countries from LATIN AMERICA are LATINOS. BUT in this case, Brazil doesn't have similarities with that american view of what LATINO means, therefore they don't recognize themselves in that word. In conclusion, the answer to that question will the depend on what your perspective of LATINO means. edit1: but the correct perspective is the first one, obviously. edit2: latin america would only make sense culturally (and means the same thing-> the countries in the americas that derive from a romance culture/latin language. Geographically the correct term is south america.
Perfectly stated. People need to start to think of French people as Latin people to break the stereotypes and start to focus on the former definition of what Latin means.
A criança que nasce na Colômbia filha de pai Colombiano afro-descendente e mãe Polaca, com 5 anos de idade se muda com os pais que decidem morar na Rússia e desejam que o filho cresça falando apenas o idioma Russo, será considerada latina ou eslava? Portanto eu sou brasileiro , sulamericano , luso-falante e quero ser reconhecido apenas como tal! E desafio qualquer um aqui a debater sobre isto.
To me, Brazil is like a person who's that sexy, but weird, and thicc girl with internal issues that hung around with a group long enough to be seen at a part of family.
Well... as a brasilian I'm surprised with this video, I never noticed brasilians does't identify themselves as latinos... I think we just don't use this word much, probably because we don't need to.
+Diego Guillermo Schmidt Yeah, for sure. I consider myself a "real" latina but there's many brazilians that are not even "fakes" latinos. So yes, we speak a latim language but could you consider all of us a real latinos? 😞
Joanna, it is indeed complicated.The term "Latino" is more like an American statistic/ demographic term that loosely means Latin American, but not really. In demographic/statistical terms, American confuse the concept of Race/Ethnicity with origin/country. This is what makes the thing confusing.... For example: Uruguay and Argentina are the countries with the most whites in all of the Americas. So does that make them Latinos or Whites in the American Census concept? You tell me. As for us Brazilians, we may draw parallel with the Russians, who don´t consider themselves neither Europe nor Asia. It´s kind of the same thing here in Brazil, we may not have a strong Latin American identity, specially because we are the only Portuguese speaking country in the Region and although we share a somewhat similar background with other South American neighbours, distances are so great that the majority of the population doesnt have much contact with the Spanish language...
as a uruguayan you have no idea how confusing that is oh my god i call myself both white and latina whenever it suits the conversation best thank god i dont live in the usa because i would go insane
florome well it doesn't have to be that confusing, I'm Colombian but I'm like pale as a sheet of paper. So I just say I'm white and Latino because Latino is not a race. After all. Every culture that comes from the roman empire is a Latino culture.
yeah smartass, lemme just walk around sayin "oh, oh no... i'm LUSO-american, you know the same ways white north americans are anglo-americans or nordic-americans."
98% of americans thinks that Brazil speaks spanish!! But other 2% of americans knows that Brazil speaks portuguese, but they think that the portuguese is Just a dialect of Spanish!!!!🤣
@@gbr22br63 o nosso Português é mais próximo da língua galega do que do português de Portugal. Depois procure vídeos de galegos falando, o sotaque é bem mais fácil de entendermos do que a um português falando. O Galego era o português arcaico falado no norte de Portugal, até que a Galícia foi anexada à espanha, e o galego sofreu interferencias do espanhol, enquanto o Portugues de portugal continuou em mutação com o passar do séculos. Hoje em dia o português e o Galego dividem 85% do léxico do idioma. É uma lingua linda!!!!!
The meaning of "latino" is one of the most confusing things in the world. People say it has nothing to do with the ethnicity, but with the origin of the spoken language: we are Latin because we speak portuguese ... But Angolans also speak portuguese. People born in Angola are Latin? And the people who are born in Jamaica and speak English, or in Suriname and speak Dutch, are what? Besides, nobody calls canadians, americans, english and australians Anglo-Saxons... Then they say that "latinos" are those who live in South and Central America... Well, if that were the case, why would North Americans call the descendants of "Latinos" that are born and live there Latinos as well? And if we consider the history of the countries, it complicates the matter even more. Each "Latin America" country had different stories, some with drastically different details from others. "Latinos" is a term that causes more confusion than organization. I would suggest we abandon it completely.
Cara é bastante simples na verdade. Se você fala português,espanhol,italiano ou francês você é um latino porque essas são línguas de origem no latim (por isso agente costuma se entender bastante). As pessoas (principalmente nos EUA) gostam de esteriotipizar latinos dizendo que na maioria são pessoas de pele morena,que falam espanhol e gostam de bailar,e por isso muitos portugueses,franceses e italianos não se consideram latinos. Então sim,pessoas de Angola são latinos. E até canadenses podem ser latinos já que tem uma parte do país deles que fala francês (quebec). O termo correto seria linguas românticas.
Lucy Vai dizer isso para os Nortamericanos e Canadenses. Además, vários estados dos EUA tem cidades inteiras que ainda preservam idioma e costumes hispânicos (estão lá desde antes da independência dos EUA, que antes eram só a costa leste), nem por isso os estados que em teoria são "latinos", se veem como tal. Latino é em via de regra um termo pejorativo para todos que são muito diferentes do povo dos Estados Unidos da América.
Sim, Lucy, a coisa é bastante simples... Só que não. Vê se algum português, espanhol ou francês se considera "latino"... Ou se nos EUA alguém chama um angolano de latino... Parece-me que a coisa vai muito além da mera origem da língua falada.
Ateu, e daí? Não é porque eles não se considerem latinos que eles não sejam.A maior parte da população dos EUA mal deve saber oque significa o termo Anglo-Saxonico mesmo eles estarem encaixados nesse termo. Agora vou responder sobre esses costumes "latinos" nos EUA. Essas cidades do EUA que você mencionou tem línguas latinas como segunda língua.Só isso já é o suficiente pra provar que os EUA não faz parte dessa dominação porque tem que ter uma língua proviniente do latim como língua oficial para ser considerado latino,e não como segunda língua.Esses "costumes" não tornam um país latino porque como já disse essa denominação está direcionada a língua e não à uma raça. Essa confusão toda foi causada por esse esteriótipo dos EUA que dizem que latino é uma raça,quando naverdade se trata de uma denominação para as pessoas que falam línguas provinientes do latim.Acontece que os EUA acabam influenciando outros países e por conta disso portugueses,franceses e italianos não se consideram latinos até porque muitos não tem interesse em saber então acaba ficando por isso mesmo.E nós brasileiros acabamos fazendo a mesma coisa.Esse esteriótipo é tão grande que muitos hispânicos acabam acreditando no mesmo oque contribui mais uma vez para os latinos da europa(eu sei que é um pouco esquisito falar isso mas é assim que se fala) não se considerarem latinos. E para provar que franceses e tal SÃO LATINOS: pt.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europa_latina
Is Angola's first language Portuguese? If yes then yes they are. Are Portuguese Latinos? Obviously yes, they are. The problem is exactly that the word turned into a buzz word for 'ethnic' identification. Just drop the word Latino yes, it makes no sense-
Latino just means that the mother tongue in your country derives from latin. Exp: Spanish, Italian, French, and yes.. Portuguese :) So yeah, Brazil is a Latin American country, therefore, brazilians are Latinos! :D
"Latino is an adjective that comes from the word 'latinus' which refers to that which is natural from the peoples that speak languages that derive from latin." You're welcome, sir.
The problem is that latino is a linguistic classification so italians, french, portuguese, spanish and romanians are also latinos. But people in the USA use latino as a "race" and "culture" term, so basically what happens is that if you say you are latino, they think you eat spicy food and dress like a mariachi while shouting "AY AY AY" which are just mexican stereotypes. So that's why me as a brazilian don't like that term, it doesn't represent us. Is just like saying that United States, Germany and Jamaica are all "germanic", and treat it like a culture and race, imagine that: Hitler, Adam Sandler and Bob Marley would be considered the same race and the same culture, does that make sense? And I don't want to be rude, but as a brazilian the only latin american countries that I think there is some similarities with us is Uruguay and Argentina (they are similar to southern brazilian culture) and some parts of northern brazil may share some cultural ties with Venezuela and Colombia, but the two most populated areas (Southeast and Northeast) in Brazil aren't connected to any latin american country, neither geographically nor culturally. So to the average brazilian, most latin american countries are just as distant culturally from us as USA and Canada are, we actually share more cultural similarities with Portugal (and Italy in some parts of Brazil) than with our neighbors. Even Brazil doesn't represent us very well, the culture that most people think as "brazilian" is just Rio de Janeiro city culture (samba, bossa nova, carnival with fantasies and big colored cars) that don't apply to most part of the country, the rest of the country have very different cultures. To foreigners understand imagine the US. It is a big country with a bunch of cultural differences between the states, now imagine the whole world only knew New Orleans and thought of your entire country as a big New Orleans, that's what happens to Brazil. So we are already too misrepresented worldwide as brazilians, being classified as latino just make it worse.
Exactly! I understand that Latin Americans in the US feel like they need to re-appropriate the term and use it with a positive connotation, but the problem is that it just doesn't make any sense outside the US. So the rest of the Latin American community in the entire world end up discussing a term that white US people invented because the insist on calling themselves "Americans". So yeah, I refuse to identify with a name that has such huge imperialistic connotations attached to it, and to a lot of people that ends up sounding like I'm not proud of my Latin American identity or something. :'(
Americans have pretty weird racial vision in general. They don't consider Jews white. and I've seen some americans saying that portuguese, spaniards and italians aren't white also. In USA I would never be considered white even though I look caucasian with light skin and blond hair. but I have some native brazilian blood in me. so maybe I would be considered native even though I'm mostly of european descent. Americans are very very confused about races.
So you basically want the word to see the white side of Brazil? Because you do not like foreigners think as Brazilian culture carnival or bossanova, you prefer foreings see the similarities Brazil has with Europe because "White is better". Even thought you are White (or white passing) that is just very sad, you have some inner racism going on. Hope you work on that.
I'm not saying european culture is better, I'm just saying that what the world perceive as being typical brazilian is actually the culture of a specific region of Brazil. There's a bunch of regions in Brazil with strong amerindian and african culture, but most foreigners have never heard or seen these places, North Brazil for example has a lot of native tradition and Bahia has the strongest African culture in Brazil and I would say in all of the American continent, but very few foreigners know that because they are too focused on Rio. I was born in a region dominated by caipira culture, which is a result of native brazilian and portuguese culture, here the traditional music is sertanejo raiz, which contains elements of portuguese music like acordeon and guitar, and the lyrics talk about the life of the caipira most of the time, which lived in the countryside. Where I'm currently living it is also part of the caipira culture but here there is also some African influenced practices like the congadas, which is a catholic religious feast where people plays drums and most of the players are blacks. And also Bossa Nova is a typically upper class white people music here in Brazil, the great majority of worker class brazilians don't care about bossa nova, and samba is typically most appreciated in Rio and São Paulo city, they play samba at bars there, but the rest of Brazil don't care that much about samba, in the north, northeast, central-west, large parts of southeast and south, you will hardly find samba being played, each region here has its own typical musical genres and dances. My intention was not to diminish African influence in Brazil, I only wanted to show that Brazil is much more than Rio. Also I forgot to mention that carnival has european origin.
Mary from the Rosary no offense, but I don't think Brazil is the only example of diversity... I mean, in Mexico we don't play mariachi or cumbia all the time, most of the people prefer pop, rock or ballads. And I think that for every country the foreigners focus in the cliches to make a culture different from the others... But I got it, I don't consider myself as "Latina" either, even though I'm not white, I find that classification simplistic and stupid, I prefer to be called mestiza if you're talking about race, or Mexican if you're considering the culture... But technically we all share the same language tree, so we all are Latin people including Latin European and Latin Americans. In any case I prefer the term "Latin" or "Latin American", what for me is more accurate and less stereotyped.
As a Brazilian, when I lived in USA I felt that 90% of the time that I was being called Latina, the intention was to put me in a Box w the rest of Latin America, but to be fair, even tho there are many things in Brazil different from other countries in Latin America, we have similarities. When I went to any Mexican restaurant (Brazilian food is completely different than Mexican, just to be clear) but the taste reminded me of my home. So even tho is not the same, it has similarities. What makes Brazilians angry about that is the lack of respect for our country, ppl call us Latinos bc of an accent or bc of our color and already assume that we are Hispanic! WE ARE NOT HISPANIC AT ALL! (Which is not a bad thing just to be clear, but that’s not what we are). But when I hang out w my Hispanic friends, their houses, their families and even their lifestyle are similar to mine! So I understand the similarities, the only thing that bothers me is that Americans don’t care at all about geography and put all Latinos in the “Mexican Box” without caring about our culture. I’m Latina, I’m Brazilian, I speak Portuguese and I have my own Culture, just like the other countries in Latin America. We are different, yes, but when you go to another country, full of gringos, is amazing to feel that you belong in a group, make you feel confident and comfortable. And even tho we are not the same, we have things in common, and that’s good!
Well, I'm Brazilian and I consider myself Latina... Just not Hispanic. Besides, I'm so happy you made a video about Brazil, Joanna! I was waiting for this!
i speak spanish and i dont consider myself hispanic, i have never heard anyone say that word in my country, i think of myself as latino and i would always be glad to be in the same group as brasilians they are the best and only one who dont hate us in south america lol, im from chile btw.
Hispanic is a word wrongly used by u.s people to refer to spanish-speaking people. It annoys me because Hispanic refers to the ancient Hispania (Iberian peninsula) in the times of Roman Empire
nornally because there are some Brazilians that think Latins are Spanish speakers in Larin America. I dont agree with that! we are Latins, in terms of Language (originally from Latin) and by region! hahahha I think the ones that do not consider Brazilians Latin they should study a little bit hahah As I consider myself as American. Remembering South America is also America hahaha
Os latinos do Sul da Europa são em geral mal vistos pelos europeus do Norte, assim como os latino-americanos são mal vistos pelos americanos do Norte (EUA), pra eles os latinos são pessoas desleixadas que só pensam em festas e diversão.
It’s the easiest thing to call ourselves. We’ve been doing it for over 200 years so I don’t think it’s going to change. Obviously it isn’t ideal linguistically, but it’s better than United Statesian. Everyone else calls us Americans too. Você é americano? Sim, sim, eu sou americano!
aqui nos USA e no Canadá, não ensinam que são subcontinentes, e sim 2 CONTINENTES diferentes, América do sul e do norte. Então para os EUA, Canadá e outros paises como Inglaterra e Índia, não existe o CONTINENTE AMERICANO. Logo se não existe, não tem pq os Brasileiros serem chamados de Americans. Não é sub para nós, são 2 continentes diferentes tipo a a África e Europa.
@@JorgefromtheO e a partir de quando essa divisão em 2 continentes passou a valer pra eles? E você imagina com o intuito de quê? Talvez evitar uma certa dualidade? Porque o gentílico Usoniano não pegou nos Estados Unidos, né? Aí é mais fácil dobrar todo o resto.
-You are latin because you are from Latin America. -Ok. -You are Latin because you speak Spanish. -WAR DECLARED! I have a question: If we are Latin because we speak romantic languages, why don't have a "Latin Europe", "Latin Africa" and why the French speakers from Canada aren't Latin?
Artur Lima there actually is a Latin Europe. But Europeans don’t care too much for it. However, speaking as a Hispanic I think that we took the word Latino and ran with it. Now we are proud of the called Latinos. Even if we are from different countries the majority of us are listening to the same music, and eating more or less the same food. We are all proud of each other’s success, even if they are not from our country. If one Latino does something good or bad it reflects on the entire community.
I am Latin European and we do consider ourselves Latin European, just not Latin American. Latin Europeans are: French, Italian, Romanian, Spaniards and Portuguese. We all speak different languages.
Portugal y espana siempre han estado juntos desde gue la peninsula era una Isla , la gente de Portugal crusa a espana sin permiso de frontera existe una calle libre gue pueden cruzar gente de Portugal o espana sin permiso como amigos
Artur Lima latin Europe exist since 2000 years my friend... and still does es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europa_latina es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultura_latina And politically, within the UE, latin countries we have our own informal group (+greece) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EU_Med_Group
Geographically, yes Linguistically, yes (even french and italians are in this case) Culturally (including political tendencies, food, sports, music), YES! YES! YES! There's Candombe (talking about music) in Uruguay and when you listen to it, it sounds a lot like african influenced music in Brazil. Evolution occurred after all the different cultures collided, but it doesn't take away the fact that we are latinos. Yes Brasil has the largest japanese population outside Japan, and H-U-G-E (trump-like H-U-G-E) influence from italians and arab nations, with some german/dutch thrown in the middle... but none of that takes away the fact that we are latinos. Period. Great video btw... prob someone else pointed this out, but the google lady is from Portugal :)
If we think being Latino because of language, actually French, italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, even tho they are in europe, they are also latins. which I find the only explanation to call SOUTH AMERICANS "latinos", because we come from Latin language.
Exactly, I have read that the word Latin America was something introduced by the french to make latin american countries feel "closer" to the European counterparts, through the language. And these sub-qualifications are very common around the world. The significance only depends on us. I see no problem, after centuries, change the original meaning of 'latino' to mean people with, somewhat similar cultures/backgrounds. Carnival is an equally festive date in most of the countries as is most other catholic dates, Food is similar (at least the ingredients), music isn't far off either. And it is much easier for a Brazilian who doesn't speak any other language to understand a Spanish speaker (slowly and all) than any other language.
You forgot to say we also have the biggest African population outside Africa. We’re sooooo weird! Our multitude of phenotypes is so vast our passports are valued by thieves kkkkkkkkkkkkkk
We sure as hell do. What should be discussed is whether or not we use the term latino, but try to get rid of the negative meanings to the term. There's no harm in latinos calling each other latinos.
This is 100% a USA problem. It's them using it as a derogatory term towards brown people that ''changed'' the meaning of the word. ''There's no harm in latinos calling each other latinos.'' No, but Imagine if me a white/blonde Portuguese went to Miami and told some Puerto-Rican that I'm a Latino too lol
As a Filipino (trying to learn Spanish so I stumbled here... hey, you're fun!) we have Hispanic roots and influences (and blood probably) but not Hispanic -- a lot of our language is influenced by spanish words, and some towns/cities still speak a Spanish-creole dialect
Filipinos still has a native language as a speakers majority...and this southeast asian country is closer to Indonesia than it's to Spain no?It's a country of hispanic heritage but if you classify a majority ethnic-native population as a european colonization vestige is a little disrespectful(my opinion)...Brazil is mostly a country of European(Italian and Portuguese mainly) descend,but we don't wanna classify themselves based on the people who colonized us...it's okay if some people wanna identify as a hispanic...but what about who is not?that's a question about cultural tolerance😅the native peoples of Americas feels disrespected hearing this word...
Lol Filipino are the mixed family member who is sometimes invited and sometimes not. But at least you’re not like our forgotten cousin the Romanian who is rarely mentioned in Romance languages
Eu sou brasileira e vivo na Argentina, atualmente. Eu sempre me considerei latina, mas o que me chocou aqui foi descobrir que a maioria dos meus amigos hispanohablantes daqui, não me considerava latina e justificavam com o fato de eu não falar espanhol. A gente ficou um bom tempo conversando e argumentando sobre isso kkkkkkkkkkkk
Eu não me considero, e a grande maioria dos brasileiros não. Estamos culturalmente afastados do restante da américa latina, mas ainda assim em geral nos sentimos líderes deles. Estranho hein "Uma pesquisa inédita de opinião pública confirmou o que a história e o senso comum já sugeriam: o brasileiro despreza a América Latina, mas ao mesmo tempo se vê como líder nato da região. Apenas 4% dos brasileiros se definem como latino-americanos, ante uma média de 43% em outros seis países latinos (Argentina, Chile, Colômbia, Equador, México e Peru). E mais: quem mora no Brasil avalia que o país seria o melhor representante da América Latina no Conselho de Segurança da ONU, mas não quer livre trânsito de latinos por suas fronteiras nem priorizar a região na política externa."
@@sirbjergsen308 Eu me considero e muito. To achando novidade achar brasucas que não se veem como latinos. "Eu só sou um cara latino americano sem dinheiro no banco"
O termo "latino" é parte da construção da identidade comum entre os falantes de espanhol. O Brasil naturalmente não participou desta construção. É apenas uma questão de ter chegado atrasado na festa e ficar com vergonha de comer o bolo. Brasileiros se enxergam como... brasileiros e nada mais... parecido com o que acontece com os britânicos em relação a Europa, por exemplo: Portugal tem orgulho de ser europeu, Reino Unido tem orgulho de ser... o Reino Unido.
and Latin America is countries which use a Latin root language, they including Spanish, Portuguese, and even French. So technically, Haiti is a Latin America country
Juliana Silva they weren't talking about Brazil they were talking about Hispania(the region were Spain and Portugal are) which use to be the Iberian peninsula's name
But the "Hispania" is how the Iberian Penisula used to be called in the Roman Empire. Today, the modern classification is Iberian. Also, Portuguese people call themselves as Lusitanians and call "Hispanics" just countries culturally linked to Spain (and I think in Spain they have the same classification)
@Egy Rinaldi-Putra By this definition, Quebec is also latin america, 'case they speak french. "But they used to be the same language" Yeah, the latin language; and by this definition Italy, France, Spain, and Portugal are the Latin world as well.
Somos latinos. Todos. The languages are not the same, but they are so similar, even to the extent that in the borders a Portuñol dialect emerges. Our cultures, though very distinct from country to country, share so much. Brazilian colonization was made so we antagonized Spanish colonies, and literally for hundreds of years we only cared about the coast, to Portugal, Europe. I understand that brazilians don't feel connected or related, but it's past time we start to activally seek for this lost link. I think that Brazil as a country will only be successful with we advance together with our neighbors. I've lived in Mexico for a year, as an exchange student, and at first wasn't really atracted to the idea of going there. I wanted to go to Europe, but chance got me there. I'm so grateful to get to know Mexican people, Mexican culture, food. In the end, I think that what get brazilians to say that they aren't Latino is prejudice, ignorance.
I am brazilian, and I just started identifing myself as a Latino when I moved to China and realized only other Latin Americans could understand the reality of my country and culture. In that moment I understood that YES, we are part of one group.
If you go to an Asian country (that has a very exotic culture for most Brazilians), probably even an American would understand better the reality of the American continent than the Asians do...
@@guruxara7994 not really. Because I am talking about identifing myself as a latino in the middle of foreigners from all over the world. Only my friends from Latin America could understand my reality, while the other foreigners (from the USA, Europe etc) had nothing to do with me. We, Latinos, shared songs, dances and food. It was awesome.
luis suarez He's just saying that some of us argentinians have some kind of God Complex and think themselves as european just because of their last name
We are latinos. We speak a language arisen from latin, we have iberian heritage, we have similar behaviors, we are all part of the same motherland: Latin America. It's natural to think we wouldn't fit in because we see how in the US hispanic imigrants are fit in the category "latino" very perversely, but in a deeper look we have more in common than we think. I hope one day we can languish the borders separating us and consume Bolivar's dream.
I live in a town Framingham ma that has about 20,000 Brazilians e the censes doesn't counts them as white cus it says Hispanic not latino they are latino not hispanic
One of the reasons brazilians dont consider themselves latinos is because most of brazilian population lives along the coast, thousands of kilometers from other "latinos nations" in america.. I personaly only saw one person speaking spanish in my entire life living in Brazil.
these people from the United States want to be recognized as the only America, so they are called Americans, and Americans are all those who are from America> argentina > Brasil > eua > méxico and canadar, we are all americans
I'm brazilian and I consider myself latina. I didn't know that brazilian people don't consider themselves latinos. uai eu não sabia que tinha brasileiro que não se considerava latino, mano nós estamos na américa latina.
Eu nao me considero latina E é pq tipo Uma coisa é fzr parte da América latina Outra coisa é fzr parte da cultura latina E são coisas q dependem uma da outra E como o brasil n faz parte da cultura Podemos discutir se somos ou n latinos
Parece até que quando vamos nos apresentar pra alguém de fora tem que falar tudo... Eu por exemplo seria bem assim "Oi, sou paulistana, paulista, sudestina, brasileira, sul americana, latina americana e cidadã do mundo" putz q perca de tempo, se tu tá no brasil fala q é de tal estado e cidade e se for no exterior fala que é brasileira, bem mais prático do q essa discussão se é latino ou não.
Nós somos latinos porque, culturalmente, historicamente e politicamente, nós temos bastante semelhanças com nossos vizinhos hispano-americanos, além do mais, derivamos nossas línguas da cultura latina.
Não mesmo. Nossa história de independência é diferente. Não tivemos uma civilização indígena. Nossos pratos típicos, roupas, danças e folclore é único com algumas ressalvas. Entenda que o termo se aplica unicamente à localização geografica e linguística. Culturalmente somos brasileiros - só.
@@Yostheou Concordo. As pessoas tendem a pensar que ser latino é uma identidade. E não, é uma questão de geografia e diferenciação por idioma. Mas pergunte a um Canadense, da parte francesa, se ele é Latino, já que o Francês é um idioma Latino, e eu recebi como resposta: "It's complicated". E para me explicarem o porque a Guiana Francesa é considerada latina se ela ainda é pertecente a França (país europeu) que é lingua oficial no canadá mas não se vÊ como latino...(?!)
@@Yostheou mano aceita que voce eh latino cafuza pardão, no seu dna deve ter até asiaticos, para com essa sindrome de vira lata de tentar bancar o branco europeu, pros extrangeiros nós vamos sempre ser latinos PORQUE NOS SOMOS LATINOS KRL PARA DE MIMIMI, a gente mora na america latina, em um país de terceiro mundo, miscigenado e com o estereotipo tipico de um país latino vey, até o haiti eh menos latino que o brasil
It's like, we brazilians are very different from the Hispanics, and when you talk about latinos, the first thing in your mind are Hispanics (speaking Spanish woooow). Thats why many of us don't feel that we are latinos. But yes, we are latinos.
Brazilians are latinos, we are in latin america, we have latin heritage, we speak a latin language. Seems like these brazilians that don't see themselves as latinos just want to be seen as white/not south american by the rest of the world
Latin americans seems like a thing people from the USA use to put south american people all in the same basket. And that's not okay, because it's ignoring my entire huge huge culture. We come from all over the place. We're white and black and yellow and blue and so mixed that you can't tell where we're from just from looking at us. And our culture is mixed, so mixed that we don't know where things come from. And that's beautiful. That's wonderful. And saying "oh, I'm latina" just doesn't do it justice.
If you want to lable me, lable me south american. Brazilian. That's fine. Because if the argument is that our language derives from latin therefore we must be all the same, why don't we call north americans "anglo-saxonic people"? That seems right, doesn't it?
You can very easily call us Anglo-Saxon folks, but at that point it becomes more a question of racial background as well. If "Anglo-Saxonic" were anywhere near as catchy as "Latino," we'd readily adopt that name. :)
We are brazilians and latinos And every brazilian who thinks otherwise is geographically wrong Quer fzr um teste põe uma salsa e veja se seu corpo fica parado
Loved this video, thank you! As a light skinned, black curly haired Brazilian(born in Belo Horizonte, BR), I’m often perceived as either, Italian, Israeli/Mediterranean, French or Greek. After 4 years attending school in Boston and living in LA for almost 20 years, I’m perceived as an east coaster and when asked about my heritage(stated above), the vast majority of the inquirers, are surprised by my actual origin. So...I consider myself a Non-Hispanic Latino. When I say that, most people scratch their heads and ask how that works. I simply explain that, Brazilian speak Portuguese.
This video was awesome. I loved it! And I love Brasil! They are amazing peopl, very kind and sweet, and the country is so beautiful, except if we talk about football, then they are our enemieeeeees! (I'm from Argentina, that's why)
We don't feel like we don't fit in, we just don't really give a shit about Latino. He likes to destroy good music, so we try to pretend he is not there. Kkkk
@@g.m.7416 Yeah but in French Guiana people speak French, and in Guiana people speak English. We are not the only ones that don't speak Spanish in Latin America.
Why do Brazilians have to be "Latinos"? 🙄 I'm not Latino, I don't live in Vaticano, I don't speak Latin language and I don't live in an unique culture...
brazilians started not considering themselves latinos ever since latino started his career.
Lara 😂😂😂😂😂
Lara Latino 😭😭😭😊
Lara muuuito bom ajhsushsus
MÉODEOZ
Marcelo Freitas Boa velho sushshhshshsha
The last part of the video: "a computer voice speaking Portuguese with a Portugal's accent" in a video talking about Brazilians. That's much more controversial for Brazilians. Hahaha
MarcioNSantos I swear I only got "Joanna e eu" and I couldn't recognize the rest of those words. Yep, Portuguese is my first language, but I don't know which language people from Portugal speak.
Man, I've been to Lisbon and I SWEAR TO GOD it got to a point I wanted people to speak English to me - and yes, I'm Brazilian too. Worst part tho? They understand EVERY SINGLE WORD we say.
As a Brazilian, I thought the same when I heard the accent
Indeed! hahaha
It says: "Johanna e eu dizemos minha paz". I'm not sure, portuguese is not my first language and that sentence doesn't really make sense haha
brazilians in brazil:we are not latinos
brazilians outside brazil: we are latinos
Somos latinos quando é conveniente! Rsrsrsrsrs!
@@douglassmith5188 hoje é festa lá no meu apê. Ops, esse Latino não kkk
Misma cosa en México, dentro del país, no nos consideramos latinos, solo fuera de este.
So I guess Guyanese people are Latino too right?
Eso es hipocrisia latino es cualguier idioma derivado del Latin no es la persona
"theres no brazilians here"
the comment section: allow us to introduce ourselves
We welcome Brazil. Youre not funny btw
@@dolphinbeta514 OP made me chuckle out loud. I though they were funny kkkk
claro mano tava esperando oq haha
I love veggietales!!!!!
Nós, brasileiros, não nos consideramos latinos pq existe um cantor chamado Latino e todos nós temos vergonha dele.
Brazilian people don't consider themselves as latin because we have a singer called Latino and we doesn't like him.
Sandro Macena sò voce querido
Sandro Macena kkkkkkkkkk... Eu gosto de ser considerada latina.. ingleses amam latinhas aí quando eu falo com um boy eu digo que sou brasileira latina kkkk
exactly my boy
Sandro Macena meeeeoooo deeeeos melhor comentário
kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
Some gringos be like:
Hey, you’re from Brazil right?
Me: yeah
Gringo: so you speak spanish
Me: nope
Gringo: oh I forgot, you speak brazilian
Me:
responde que alguns linguistas defendem essa teoria de que existe sim uma "língua brasileira" mas por enquanto, oficialmente, ainda falamos português kkkk
I feel you. I live in Ohio and it goes like this:
Where are you from?
Me: Venezuela
So you speak mexican!!
Me: ...
🙄🙄🙄🙄
Zorailyn Martinez Lool 😂
@@zorailynmartinez9769 omg kkkkkkkk
Me: "Oh. My. Goodness!!!
-You speak Spanish?
-No, only Portuguese
-Si, pero és lá miesma cuesa, és no?
-what?
Cuesa?
La bolita quadradita.
Ed. Júnior o que seria cuesa? Não seria COSA?
En africa se habla portugues,frances y no son llhamados de latinafricanos solamente africanos ?
@@dresende7765 na África não existe os EUA para roubarem os termos "África" e "africanos".
As a Brazilian I must say I didn’t use to consider myself latino. After I traveled to other countries in Latin America and also met other latinos outside of our continent I started considering myself as one. Jorge Drexler, the Uruguayan singer, was one my biggest influences while finding that out.
Love this!
Aí os outros de chamava de brasileino macaquito né latino é uma barra aqui é brasileiro.
@@gustavojoseruy-secco8725 só quem chama brasileiro de macaco são os argentinos pq eles são nazistas
Same here! Specially when I went to Europe last year I figured out I’m latino.
I feel much more connected with our continent now ❤️
Obs.: I’m going to Argentina in next week! 😊
existem 2 tipos de latino-americanos
1 - latinos
2 - analfabetos funcionais
I'm an American living in Brazil....so let's see how my take on this goes...
My wife is brazilian, carioca da gema, and she says that honestly she never really thought about it. Most Brazilians just think of themselves as Brazilian. But she does say that she is Latina, she sees the meaning of the word and understands that it applies to her(she lives in latin America, she speaks a romance language, and she is a descendant of Italians and Portuguese) so she says that she is Latina, but doesn't care or think about the term.
I think most brazilians feel a similar way, they recognize that they are Latino but don't care enough to include that in their identity, they're just... brazilian
Aknight292 well, as it fucking happens EVERYWHERE! Italians identify themselves as italians, mexicans as mexicans and chinese as chinese. Your comment is so dumb.
why are u being rude? he just said that because in the video she said that brazilians don't see themselves as latinos... so he's just trying to say that ACTUALLY nobody fucking cares
and we are talkin about brazil, not about china, mexico or italy
chill
Aknight292 THAT'S IT!
you totally said it
@marcomili wow. why are you so mad? você tá precisando se acalmar, ta estressado demais.
I'm from the Philippines and we're Asian who have Spanish/Chinese last names, look Malay, speak a whole bunch of gazillion dialects and our primary language are Filipino and English. We are like Latin America's unknown cousin who never gets invited to anything. And also, I love you.
Ark Deveza I am from the north part of Indonesia where it borders with the Philippines, somehow got a "latino sound" last name too
Ark Deveza OMG, so cute
You are our lost cousins, who speak a funny dialect in some areas (chavacano), and a total different thing in others. At the end of the day, you are part of the family, mate.
Indonesian look like Brazilians and many aspects
Fatmah Dell'Aglio I'd like to know more about Indonesians but apart from your native people potentially looking like afro-Brazilians or most Indonesians looking like some indigenous tribes in the north of Brazil. I wouldn't say in general Brazilians and Indonesians look the same. Most Brazilians have a certain degree of mixed but normally in between different types of European background , middle East background or African background or mixed in between both. There's some other mixes with Asians but that's minority. But as we say, literally any human being in the world could be Brazilian, there isn't as many countries as diverse racially as Brazil is.
I'm still waiting for a full video about Colombian vs Venezuela + their differences and the shit we have in common
and talking about how the Fuckings arepas are venezuelan, a no one is gonna talk me out of it
Camila Manjarres She should do it with her novio I just found out he's Colombian. It would be so fun!!
daniela i. gonzalez.h Haha Joropo is ours btw XD
hell no!
wait! we hate venezolanos?
Somos latinos ss, pela língua.
Mas fica a reflexão, quantas vezes vc ouviu alguém se referir aos americanos como "anglos"??????
é pq a definição vem dos caras né, eles que precisam categorizar geral pq se consideram "padrão" pra tudo, boa sacada!
exatamente meu amigo! o termo latino é estritamente econômico: países de 3o mundo do hemisfério sul com idiomas latinos. Tenso!
@WorldAndLangs pois é
Essa lógica não faz sentido porque o Francês e o Italiano também derivaram do Latim e eles não são considerados latinos.
Se for pesquisa afundo o inglês vc tb achará uma boa parte que se deriva do latim então se fosse pela língua quem fala inglês TB poderiam ser considerados latinos
I don't know whether I'm Latino, I need to ask the US Gov.
hahaha
Y ese nombre? brazuka? JAJAJAJAJA
@@0505121968 kkk
@Latin American pra que ficar xingando a mãe dos outros, além de desnecessário é extremamente desrespeitoso, vai se tratar
At least you got the source an the authority of what is "Latino" correctly.
"Eu sou apenas um rapaz
Latino-Americano
Sem dinheiro no banco
Sem parentes importantes
E vindo do interior..." Belchior
Well quoted! ¶;D~
Sou apenas um Rapaz latino americano Apoiado por mais de cinquenta mil manos, efeito colateral que seu sistema fez, Racionais CAP 4 Versiculo 3!
Parem de latir rsrs
"Minha vida, meus mortos
Meus caminhos tortos
Meu sangue latino
Minh'alma cativa"
Secos & Molhados
não podemos ser caracterizados pelo idioma. E sabe porque esta tese de "ser latino" cai por terra? Porque se tu for levar em consideração que os "americanos originais" ( de sangue puramente americano) são indígenas, logo não seriamos latinos. Ou seja , não podemos ser caracterizados pelo idioma e muito menos por sangue.
It's like the British people who don't consider themselves European. Particularly, as I Brazilian, I like to be included in the Latino's club.
Nah, we wont be Europeans for much longer. Before u comment do ur research
Really? Will you be North American, South American, Asian, African or Oceanian? Because these are the only fucking options.
Antarctican hahahahaha
@@theragdollmodels6175 European Union =/= European continent, why don't YOU do your research ignorant Brit
@@theragdollmodels6175 British people are still Europeans just because we are leaving the EU does not make them any less European.
What you said about the Philippines is on point. We do have Spanish names since we were colonized by Spaniards. Some of us also speak broken Spanish and even our days, months, numbers, utensils and how we curse are all in spanish😂 the music, culture and a whole lot more are in spanish so yeah 😂 saludos desde Filipinas🇵🇭
Philippines can easy pretend to be Asian Brazilian, uds son latinos también.
Saludos desde Brasil.
Yes we are Hispanic but not Latinos
Asians
You wish you were Hispanics but u only use a few words, ur not Hispanics
@@luelzone7474 no you’re Asians. Hispanic wannabes.
The Latino thing is so controversial because the brazilian singer "Latino" that really sucks and we don't want to remember him or be like him, I think
Manuela Magalhães mortaaaa
mana onde? aqui no meu pais amazonas é uma merda :) so sabe copiar musica dos outros e nem fica melhor que o original
Vc me representa! O berro que eu sei quando li seu comentário!
AHSUAHSUHSUSHS EU TO PASSANDO MAL
Hahahahahhaha, quase me caguei de rir aqui...kkkkkk
We as Chileans don't understand other Chileans. You all have different accents even in the same country.
and popcorn are palomitas
Yasmín Bernal Barra popcorns are cabritas
Augusto Polloni Palomitas.
Yasmin, they are cabritas, palomitas de maiz are a mexican thing!
yes!! Palomitas in Spain too!
Yasmín Bernal Barra haha in Puerto Rico we call them Popcorn xD. well it sounds like pojcon
Google translate falando Português de PORTUGAL 😒😒😒😒
além do mais de traduzir literalmente, ela escreveu 'I've said my peace' em Google porque traduziu como paz. E na verdade é 'I've said my piece'.
Agora já sabes como nós portugueses nos sentimos quando usam sempre portugues so brasil como exemplo em vez de português de Portugal
Ranço ;-;
Verdade se é pra falar da língua de um país pelo menos pesquise mais qual é a variedade de língua que tem nesse país. É um erro grave usar português de Portugal pra falar do português do Brasil e também é um grande erro falar da língua portuguesa usando o português do Brasil . Me poupe 😐
😭😭😭😂😂😭😭😭😭😭😭😭 the struggle 👏🏾THEY👏🏾USED 👏🏾TO👏🏾HAVE👏🏾EUROPEAN👏🏾PORTUGUESE 👏🏾👏🏾😭😭😭😭
Are Brazilians latinos?
Yes, we are.
No.
@@ewandropallottini sim nós somos, nós somos da América Latina, não importa sua opinião
@@PauloHenrique-ok3yb quem criou isso foram os americanos, ou seja, eles queriam se separar do lixo e criaram isso
@@RafaelSantos-tu1yx não???? Existem definições pra tudo isso, latinos, asiáticos, europeus, eles não queriam se separar do "lixo", cada coisa tem um nome
@@RafaelSantos-tu1yx quem criou isso foram os franceses wtf. onde que vc tirou que foram os americanos?
Dominicans are going to come after you for using the wrong flag, Kris.
Kris, you need more Dominican friends.
I have to watch it twice cause I didn't believe it
Rui Delgado kris wtf, there's Google u know
Nico _ same
Lol Kris is 2017 dont let Google imagen play u like this.
Brazil is a Latin country because it was colonized by Latin people, Portuguese is a Latin language, as well as Spanish, Italian and French! Brazil's cultural heritage is Portuguese, but not only, because it's also African (black), Italian, German, Spanish (white), asian (Japanese), and native indian... plus Brazilians keep on assimilating other cultures such as English, and the USA culture!
Jefferson Paiva Brazil was not colonised by Latin people it's Latin because Brazilian it's a Latin language
Brazil was colonized by the Latin people called Portuguese, other Latin and non-Latin people immigrated to Brazil and integrated with the nation causing an impact on the mainstream culture!
@@JefersonPaivFerreira plis just lock your self in a room and dont come out.
For those of you who don't know or haven't noticed, I'm not talking as a foreigner, I'm a Brazilian! If you've haven't been here long enough or at least studied a bit of history, it's obvious you don't know what I'm saying!
because of also cultural reasons, no, quebec and other french speaking in canada aren't latino. and let me see if i understood, you're talking about the states in the sunbelt that were mexican territory should be considered latino? well, partially i guess, but i'd assume isolated communities, since english is predominant.
As an Argentinian, I must say:
The problem is not who is consider Latino or not. Argentinians, Brazilians, Mexicans, and everybody else is indeed Latino, just because we all speak Latin languages. The problem is in the way that people use it. Tell me: How many times have you heard the word Latino to specifically speak about something related to the origin of their languages? Just a few.
It is used just as a way to make a difference between Canadá, United States, and almost every other American country below the US. And that's a very big problem.
As Joanna said, some of us just do not share basically anything but language between some others. For example, both Argentina and Colombia are Latino and also South American countries. But, as an Argentinian, I can say that I've never in my life eaten chica, tamal or even arepa. Furthermore, I've never met a Colombian. On the other hand, I feel exactly the opposite feeling with Uruguay, a country that basically shares almost all cultures with mine.
That is why sometimes some of us may feel a little bit uncomfortable when we are called Latino. It is not something about trying to feel superior or some bullshit like that. It is about that we literally do not feel Latino as it is usually used.
(Please, forgive my level of English, it is obviously not my first language).
*Traducido al español*
Como argentino debo decir:
El problema no está en quién cosideremos o no como latinol. Argentinos, brasileños, mexicanos y todos los demás somos latinos, tan sólo por el hecho de hablar lenguajes de origen latino. El problema está en el modo de uso que tienen estas palabras. Decime: ¿Cuántas veces escuchaste la palabra Latino con el fin de hablar acerca del origen de sus lenguas? Muy pocas.
Realmente es utilizado a modo de marcar una diferencia entre Canadá, Estados Unidos, y basicamente cualquier otro país al sur de EEUU. Y ese es un problema muy grave.
Tal como Joanna dijo, muchos de nosotros no compartimos casi nada a excepción del lenguaje con algunos países. Por ejemplo: Tanto Argentina como Colombia son países latinos, e incluso ambos son países sud-americanos. Pero, como Argentino puedo decir que en mi vida probe ni la chicha, ni un tamal, ni nisiquiera una arepa. Y es que hasta incluso en mi vida conocí a un colombiano en persona. Por lo contrario, me siento totalmente al revés con Uruguay, país con el que casi compartimos toda nuestra cultura.
Esa es la razón del porqué algunas veces algunos de nosotros nos sentimos un tanto incómodos cuando nos llaman latinos. No es nada acerca de tratarse de sentirse superior o alguna estupidez así. Es tan sólo que literalmente no nos identificanos como latinos en la forma que normalmente se utiliza esa palabra.
Boa hermano, saludos do Brasil 🤙🏻🇧🇷
Your English is excellent!
Hey I’m from Canada! By the way your English is perfectly fine, I understood everything. I think certain people when they say they are not Latino normally everyone else would think it’s because they don’t want to be part of it but now I understand a lot better, thank you for your insight! And it’s true the origins are all Latin. In my area we speak French, which is vulgar Latin origin. It makes me feel like everything is connected hahahaha
We focus so much in our differences that we forget our similarities. I'm Venezuelan and Argentina feels like home to me. Lived in other places before but Argentina won my heart. I'm actually typing this while eating facturas 😆
So, why we from south america are called latinos because we are from latin america and the US citizens are not called the anglos that come from Anglo-america?? Hmmmm...
Well, Brazilians don't call USA citizens as anglo-saxons, but hispanics usually call them Anglos.
They are anglosaxon. Not just anglos v:
Because we are the different
Fácil de responder.
Sou Americano 🇺🇸 e Brasileiro 🇧🇷.
O nome oficial do Brasil é, Republica Federativa do Brasil, nós não deviamos ser chamados Brasileiros e sim Brasilianos ou Brasilienses, o termo Brasileiro vem to tempo Brasil Colonia e era um termo que os Portugueses usavam pra descrever quem era da Colonia mas era utilizado de uma forma negativa, quem explica bem isso é o Peninha do Canal Buenas Ideias.
Passando pro Americano.
O nome official dos Estados Unidos é United States of AMERICA, (Estados Unidos da America).
O termo Gentilico oficial fica Sendo American. Não tem como dizer Estado-Unidense em inglês, eu vivo em New York, todos aqui tem consciencia que há mais America doque essa America 🇺🇸, nós não quizemos Tomar o termo Americano somente para nós, é que realmente não tem como ser de outra forma.
Também aqui não é inteiramente composto somente de descendentes Saxões, grande parte dos Estados Unidos pertenceu a França por um determinado periodo, outra parte pertencia a Espanha, é uma parte inclusive à Russia, ao Norte, todos esses territorios foram agregados mãos tarde por compras, através de guerras, anexos.
As 13 primeiras colônias sim eram de fato anglo-saxônicas, porém os Estados Unidos possuem outros povos que formam a nação Americana.
Aliás, se você pensa na palavra "ESTADOS" nos Estados Unidos, lembre-se que cada Estado age independentemente, como se cada um fosse um pequeno país, as leis são completamente diferentes, tem Estados com pena de morte, outros onde todas as drogas não descriminalizadas, outros onde você pode ter porte de arma e andar com ela na cintura porá onde queira, tem Estados onde casino é permitido, outros não.
Portando todos os Estados independentes da América fica utilizando o termo Gentilico AMERICAN (Americano).
Fez sentido?
Because the Anglos living in the USA happen to be a very racist bunch and they are quick to come up with ways to group others together so that they themselves can come across less racists and don't have to learn about people from different cultures. Hispanics as you see don't waste as much time worrying about what other countries are doing and welcome everyone regardless of background.
Well, I'm Brazilian and I don't mind being called Latino, I think we do have a lot in common, specially personality wise speaking...
Concordo, Eu Também não me importo de ser chamado de Latino.
Brazilians are Latinos, but they are not Hispanics because they don’t speak Spanish.
@@BenShimon5731 exatamente :)
I mean, we are
Latino is not race, the people are alieneted by the american media.
Tá, o Brasil está na América LATINA porque diabos nós não seríamos latinos??
Luly Deschamps talvez pq a gente tá na América do sul q eles inventaram de chamar de América latina né xD
Nós somos latinos sim, como ela disse, tecnicamente somos. Mas aí identidade é outra história...
E qual técnica é essa? Qual padrão? O idoma derivado do Latim? Então franceses, italianos, portugueses e romenos também são latinos.
Dênis Alves exatamente, é o q eu vivo dizendo... Se parar pra pensar os próprios falantes da língua inglesa são meio latinos, já q ela teve influencia do Latim.... O negocio é que eles adoram usar essa palavra de forma pejorativa e se acham os deuses do universo porque são "americanos", grandes porcarias né, tbm sou americana, os argentinos são, os canadenses tbm são... Enfim... Por isso q eu odeio essa definição de latino.... É só mais uma forma deles tentarem rebaixar as pessoas....
Somo latinos porque temos uma língua baseada no latin e não porque estamos na américa latina.
The latino identity started to mean a lot more to me once I left Uruguay. Chances of finding other Uruguayans are very low, however, the little parts that we have in common with the rest of Latin America made me feel at home even if I couldn't eat Mexican food without dying from the spice or I couldn't make a single salsa move. So yeah, the term was impose by the U.S but the feeling and connection is beautiful
Hey, there's always an Argie out there, they're like your cousins hehe
i felt the same going from brazil to the us, we brazilians have much more in common with other latinos than we like to admit, and as i have seen brazilians tend to form a community apart from the others. however in europe brazilians tend to commute a lot more with other latinos, there are even latino parties where you can only attend if you are latino or with latinx people
Awww! Your story kinda makes my heart ache a little! I'm from Mexico and I met an Uruguayan family not long ago while on vacation in Argentina. It turned out that they actually lived in Northern Mexico (were merely vacationing in Buenos Aires as well) and decided to approach me when they heard my Mexican Spanish because it was familiar to them. Although the parents had a very strong Uruguayan accent, their 15 year-old son was practically Mexican; he spoke just like me. It was such a heart warming moment. Your experience also reminds me a bit of the few years I spent in the States. I lived in an almost exclusively white area and the very few other Mexican Americans or US born Latinos I knew didn't really speak Spanish (or wouldn't speak it), so I was adopted by the only group of immigrant kids in my school who all happened to be South Americans (mostly Chileans, Argentinians and Brazilians). They were my total life savers! Uruguay is such a small country (but the people have the biggest hearts!) and it's so far away. I can only imagine how excited you get when you meet a fellow Uruguayan while abroad!
Paula L your comment is probably the most accurate. All people in Latin America relate to their nationality when they live at home. There isn't a need to connect to others. But other cultures are different and when you move, you want to relate more and more to people who are similar to you. That's where the 'latino' term gains new meaning.
@@gabibraule2892”latinx people” why use Latino in your whole speech but latinx at the end?
O brasileiro no geral torce o nariz para a América latina, o termo latino foi "pejorativizado" pelos norte americanos, tachando como sendo aquele cara pequenino, que fala fino, com bigode grande, olhos puxados, feições meio indígenas e que fala espanhol. Por isso muitas pessoas não gostam do termo, inclusive eu. Me considero brasileiro e sul americano, eu não saio por aí chamando um norte americano de "anglo-saxão-americano" só porque ele mora na América anglo-saxônica e fala o inglês ou um italiano de "latino-europeu" só porque ele mora na europa latina e fala uma língua derivada do latim. Quero ser reconhecido pela minha nacionalidade e não pelo termo usado para definir falantes de tal família linguistica como eslavos, germânicos, celtas, latinos, gregos, bálticos, o que seja. Se é pra definir latino, só quem vive do México pra baixo, é melhor chamar todo mundo que fala língua românica de latino também, sem distinções.
Minha opinião ✌🏻
Ser latino não é só questão de idioma, parece até que vc não assistiu o video..
@@MirellaAmaral E a partir do momento que não é só questão de idioma deixa de fazer sentindo o uso do termo.
Apoiado 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Sensacional, Finn de Frisia!
Meeeeeeee saiu da lacrosfera pra defecar na internet.
I'm brazilian and i've always considered myself latina 🤔
Pietra Pacheco, I only see e white woman, doesn't matter, we're all human
Eu não sabia nem que existia brasileiros que não se consideravam latinos kkkk
I don't consider myself latina. Nope.
Geograficamente e linguísticamente sim somos latinos porém culturalmente estamos ligados mais a Europa e aos EUA
@@MoonGanymede culturalmente você quer dizer hoje? Porque a nossa construção cultural está mais próxima da África, né hehe
Latino o caralho, aqui é Kelly Key, porra!
I have German ancestry, Portugues ancestry and of course I am Latino and I feel like that, and I love being Latino.
oi?
aahaha ah não mano, "Saulo" metendo esse loko é a mais aahaha
Gahauahsjsuajah
KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK MELHOR RESPOSTA
As a Uruguayan Brasilero I think Uruguay and Brazil have the best relationship and share a lot of vivid colors and demographics in diversity.
e brasileiro não é latino como expressado no vídeo... vizinhos e com bom relacionamento e só... Matriz de formação TOTALMENTE diferentes... Caramba a que se respeitar os aspectos históricos! Fomos parte de um reino extra continental! Herdeiros dos lusos... rs Paz e Bem.
Vc disse Cisplatina? Kkkk
AndreChampions sabia que alguém ia dizer isso kkk
I went to Uruguay on vacation and I simply loved the country and the people there! Proud to be your neighbor!
@@roselimariadasilva5176 Caso você não saiba Portugal é um país de cultura e língua latina e nós estamos na América Latina, então....
Como invocar um brasileiro:
Fazendo vídeo de ff ❌
Colocando Brasil no titulo✅
😂 Muito certo mano kkk
Geographically, there are three Americas: North, Central and South. So Brazil is a South American country
Linguistically, Brazil speaks Portuguese, a Latin language, so it is a Latin American country. Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and French are Latin languages, so even the French region of Canada is Latin.
Culturally, no one considers French Canada as part of Latin America, but Brazil also has a different culture from its neighboring countries
If you agree that French Canada should not be included in Latin America because of a cultural difference, but you think Brazil is included because to Americans it is an "exotic" country, it only shows how "Latin" is a biased term for refer to culture and race
Quebec Province is administered by an Anglo government (English Speaking). Thus, it really isn't a Latin country. Miami is one of the most 'Latin' cities in the Western Hemisphere, all while not being a part of Latin America. Brazil is a Latinoamericano country. Though, most Brazilians are black or mixed with African, there are considerable numbers of Europeans and Mestizos (Mesticos) in Brasil.
@Isaias Ribeiro Are Jamaicans Anglo for that matter? What is the cultural and social difference between Brazil and Angola? To say you are Latino in the social sense of the term means to say you are actually Latin, or have ancestors coming from Latin Europe and your current culture is an historic link to them. It's the same for Anglos in Canada and America with their ancestors. Many Brazilians are either black or mixed with African and now want to identify more with a distinct culture...but that does not take away the fact that there are tens-of-millions of white or mixed Brazilians that do have ancestors from Latin Europe (Portuguese, Italians, Spaniards)...and they most definitely look and relate closer to people in Argentina, Uruguay, or Chile, than they do some people that live in the favelas in their country! So, to answer you...are Haitians Latino? It depends...if they have French ancestors and have adopted their ways, they are....which many have not, and do not have French ancestry! French don't do vodou, and were driven out before widespread colonies were established! In fact, many Hatians relate closer to Africa, as some Brazilians do. It can be said the same for indigenous peoples in Latin America as well. Being Latin has an historic heritage as it does racial context. Latin ancestors founded Latin America, their descendants still speak their language, practice Christianity, and inherited their values! Please understand my last three sentences, as they are most important!
@@jthanrubio1126 No baby, most Brazillian are not black, first white, second Pardo, third black, forth asian.
@@jthanrubio1126
You definitely don't know anything about Brazil
@@emanuellemaria7173 Your observation is just not based on factual statistics then. We must fight about thinking with our emotions rather than our heads please...
Factoring the Black and Pardo population, clearly they made up the majority of the Brazilian population from the 2010 Census. What do you think are the odds they will outpace the growth of White Brazilians in 2020?
You are not trying to argue that Brazil is just as White as Uruguay or Argentina, are you? Sure, the south region has many European descendants, but the nation as a whole is not a White nation.
Brasileños son Brasileños porque nacen en Brasil.
Brasileños son Americanos porque viven en el continente Americano.
Brasileños son Sudamericanos porque viven en Sudamérica.
Brasileños son Latinoamericanos porque son parte de Latinoamérica.
Brasileiros
E por que ele é considera latino ?
Latino porque se supone Castellano, Portuguese, Frances, Catalan ect bienen del Latin? Falso... Bienen de Las lenguas romances.
Latino? Para quienes hablan Latin...los curas y elite( Reyes, duques ect).
Es el idioma que crearon los curas...jamas el Pueblo(plebello) hablo Latin en España, Portugal, Francia ect
No somos Latinos.
SOMOS SUR AMERICANOS
@P4to D0l4n E hispanófonos, lusófonos e francófonos em conjunto são o quê? Aliens?
@@luisureta7086 Los curas crearan el latin????? Eres evangelico tonto? Latin nacio en el Lascio, region de la peninsula italica varios seculos antes del cristianismo. Era el idioma del imperio romano.los idiomas derivados del latin vulgar son, italiano, frances, español,portugues, romance, catalan, gallego y romeno.
as a brazilian... I don't care!
Do people really get into fights because of this?! Jeeeeez.
Digital high-five for not caring about stupid arguments like this.
Of course we fought for it! For example, are you English or American? Because technically, Americans speak English but live in North America, so you consider yourself American, not British (You both speak the same language). The point I want to get is: your cultural heritage, it comes from the British Isles, but CULTURAL IDENTITY is American. Get it now? If I say, "Hi Brit," you're going to say, "I'm American." For the same reason, we fight about Brazilians being Latin or not. Ok?
Eyup.
@Rodrigo Santos Valeriano pprt. Eu n li ele dizendo "as a brazilian". Mano, eu vacilei sem querer. Itimalia
Eu só acho q é interessante debater isso. Latinos ou não somos brasileiros e ponto final
I’m Brazilian and I don’t consider myself Latino. We have nothing to do with you from culture to language. We are not the same.
Y'all still humans so stop the hate.
What about natuve indiand?
"The only thing Uruguay and Dominica. Republic have in common are roads". lmao
so wrong i been to both countries and they do have a lot more in common than they think
They speak spanish too. Both have iberian blood with blacks in Dominicana and with italians ohter europeans and amerindian and african in Uruguay.
Jeremy Vaz ??? What do you know about Uruguay?
Jeremy Vaz sorry 96% are european descendents. Maybe the most European country of All Americans. No stories about melting pot in Uruguay like in Brazil, US or Canada. Sorry.
@@pedrogallovieira7474 soy brasileño y me encanta el Uruguay. Me voy todos los años para allá y no me recuerdo haver visto gente negra allí. Jeremy Vaz ciertamente nunca estudió sobre el cisplatino y la ascendencia uruguaya.
A few facts about we Brazilians:
- Yes, we are really self-centric.
Our excuses for that:
- Language barrier (except for few exceptions like Shakira, we do not listen or see any content in Spanish) actualy we are very isolated when it comes to media/music/famous people.
- Size: we are so big that what matters for us is very local, because the local is already big. More isolation because of that.
- History: Other countries had many wars to have their independence. Brazil got it's independence by a agreement between the Portuguese Emperor with his son, that was also Portuguese and after the became the Emperor of Brazil. So, we felt like we never broke the connect with Europe.
So, I think that many Brazilians misunderstand the meaning of the words "latino/latin". We are just an isolated big country. But at least, not like in the US, we do not like to create specific words to put our neighbors from Latin America in the same basket.
Yes, I condidered myself latino. For me, it's much more like a geographic definition.
Love it ❤️
MarcioNSantos I liked this concept and we totally understand you feel isolated, we're neighbors and yet we hear so little from you... Anyways, just wanted to let you know that although it is a geographical concept it is also a feeling, is nice to have Latinos everywhere.
More than a geographic definition, it has to do with the origin of the language you speak (Latin). The geographical part is the 'América' in 'Latin-America'. So yeah c;
Great.
I just want to say that we are geographically isolated also. Until 30/40 years ago most of the interior (Mato Grosso/MS) was isolated and in the past, regions like the west of Santa Catarina was part of Paraguay territory.
The only place (as I know) that have centuries of cultural exchange with our neighbors was Rio Grande do Sul.
Dude, you're like Latin Canada lol
No one really describes themselves as "latinos" outside of the US, right? It's more how Spanish/Portuguese speakers from the Americas are generalized in the US as one group (by non-latinos). French should be there too if you think Latin languages, but no one really thinks of French speakers as latinos.
I guess some Brazilians reject the term because it's too associated with Spanish speakers ("hispanic"), but being just a dumb generalization it shouldn't mean anything. I'm Brazilian and I'm latino, how little or how much this description says about me is on you, not on me.
Because their culture and language are more associated with the British Caribbean islands, not the mainland.
Matheus Torres exactly, outside the US we identify ourselves with demonym.
Matheus Torres you're wrong about people identifying as Latinos only in the US. All of us who live in foreign lands and come from Latin America osea Brazil included identify as Latinos cause we get to understandand and realise the many things we have in common and share. From an Hispanic point of view it starts with the language. Also Spanish and Portuguese are way more similar languages than French and Spanish. It's like Scandinavian even if the languages are different Norwegians can more or less understand Swedish (depending on if they speak bokmål or Nynorsk) but that's for another debate.
Matheus Torres in our respective countries people tend to identify more as just Brazilian or Mexican or Colombian etc. I grew up in another country as a kid I didn't really realised that, but growing up going to school with other Latinos, I was in a class with Brazilians, Colombians, Venezuelan, Mexican, Ecuadorian, Cuban-Americans etc really made us realise how much we had in common. We would listen to the same Latin rock bands, Latin pop singers like Thalia or Shakira the same reggaetoneros. They were also Spaniards, Portuguese so you know we were our own little community and we shared a culture and identity despite being from several different countries. There was just some "rivalry" between the Europeans and us the Latino Americans(teenage shit) I was in an international school , there was an English section Italian and German. It was really a great human experience. As a teen that's when I really started to identify more as Latino. Basically a lot of Mexicans think I'm Mexican when I'm like mega rolo cause I was surrounded by Mexico, the music the culture, the friends. And I was accidentally almost miscarriaged and then saved in Cuba so yeah I owe my life to Cubans, both parents Colombian, I had a Salvadoran stepdad and a Cuban stepdad. Sooooo yeah I kinda don't identify as just Colombian. But more as Latino. And you know people who still live in the motherland say we're French (grew up in France) or wherever we got to grew up. But I feel like I had a richer experience and a more vivid sense of what it is to be Latino and never disconnected. And growing up in Europe never made me less Colombian/Latino. Honestly French don't consider Latino, the term is more associated with the Americas and French Canadian don't identify as Latino. It's really interesting. Cause what about Suriname or Belize or Caribbean islands where they speak Dutch or English. They're not Hispanic, they're not Latinos but they have a shit ton in common with other places nearby. So even if the term comes from languages derived from Latin it also englobes cultures that have similar roots located in the Americas. And every person who is descended from a Latino regardless of what language they speak
Im Brazilian & im NOT Latino... Doesn't matter what was the origin of the term (came from Latin bla, bla, bla), but I know that Americans use it to identify Spanish speakers as in a job interview for example.
Brasileiros não são Latinos! 🇧🇷
I love the word Latino 💕 I'm proud of being latino 🇧🇷
You must be American.
@Rodrigo Marques KK deixa ele, coitado. Deve só saber falar o inglês dele, e muito mal falado 😌
Você não é
Her explanation of Latino is wrong, Latino America bc we speak a language that comes from Latim, italians, french, spains, are also Latino! Americans that are kind ignorant hahaha
I classify myself as a American bc I live in South America continent and as a Latino bc I speak portuguese.
I am american because I was born in South America, and rumanians are latino because they speak a latin language.
USA -> North American
Brazil -> Brazilian
USA, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Canada... -> Americans
Cada um se classifica como quiser, mas o mundo sempre vai ver a gente como latinos.
Estados Unidos da América - Americanos.
Canadá - Canadenses
Estados Unidos Mexicanos - Mexicanos.
México e Canadá ficam na América do Norte e não são chamados de Norte Americano.
Aparentemente pra alguns de vcs, ser chamado de americano é ter status ao redor do mundo. Aceitem que são apenas brasileiros visto como latinos mesmo estando na América do sul 😉
I don't believe in humans não moça você entendeu errado, eu falo que sou "americana" pq eu moro, nasci na América do sul, a mesma coisa que você falar que um sul africano que nasceu no continente da africa, mas nasceu na África do Sul, não pode ser chamado de africano, sacas? nacionalidade é uma coisa. Eu tenho um orgulho enorme de dizer que sou brasileira e descendente de nativos, nunca vou negar minha origem, mas o fato que nos vivemos na América do sul e não podemos ser chamados de americanos pq não somos é um pouco burro não acho? pq somos sim sul americanos, chamem nos como quiser. Não ligo de ser chamada de latina, mas a ignorância deles a apenas se reviravolta a nós da América do sul de latino é gigante, e isso vem com uma conotação totalmente diferente as vezes com uma imagem de que nos menosprezam, mas depois estão aí babando ovo para Italianos, Espanhóis ou portugueses sem nem sequer saber a origem e o porquê somos chamados de latinos, muita ignorancia!
Yeah.. We're Latinos. There is absolutely no controversy about that. Just some people who really don't know geography and/or people who think less of their neighbors.
I'm Latino and I'm very proud of my heritage AND my brothers from Latin America, even though we have different culture, history and etc. We all have the same basic problem: Some stupid people from other countries invaded us, killed a bunch of our people and called themselves "civilized" and "explorers" and other fancy excuses to kill us, rob us, rape us and enslave us.
Toma no teu cú com esse inglês brejo rapaz.
França e Canadá são latinos então? França é um país com cultura derivada do latim e fica na América pelo menos uma parte do país, então faz parte da América Latina não? Canadá tem cultura derivada da França o que eu acabei de falar, como América Latina engloba o México e outros países da América do Norte então Canadá também faz parte da América Latina. Se a sua definição é que tem que ser massa contínua de terra então a América do Sul não é Latina pois não é conectada com a do Norte, sem falar de países insulares....
O problema é identidade étnica, se você se considera Latino tudo bem, se não também ótimo, ser ou não latino tem que partir de você, colocar etiquetas de identificação nos outros não é legal.
@@FWU100 França fica na Europa, caso você não saiba. Canadá fica na América Anglo-Saxônica.
Meu deus do céu, gente. Usem o Google! América Latina engloba todos os países do México pra baixo, é uma questão puramente geográfica. Não sei de onde o indivíduo tira que Canadá tá na América Latina. E não tem a ver com idioma. Sim, brasileiros são latinos.
@@ThalesMullerBR Volte para a escola e aprenda que existe um território inteiro maior que vários estados brasileiros na América do Sul que pertence a França.
É incrível como as pessoas aceitam, tão conformadas, essa terminologia inventada pelos EUA, a qual é claramente racista. A localização geográfica não nos torna latinos, principalmente porque esse termo (que eles inventaram) na verdade não arremete a uma localização geográfica, mas sim à uma condição social. Só não enxerga que não quer. Basicamente o q eles queriam era classificar um grupo q englobasse todas as pessoas de pele mais escura e que falassem espanhol, principalmente por razões xenofóbicas. Não é a toa q muitos estadunidenses consideram filipinos como latinos, apesar do país estar localizado na Ásia. Aliás, o próprio termo "hispânico" só foi criado depois que o termo "latino" foi considerado visivelmente racista e pejorativo, sob o pressuposto de designar pessoas de "língua materna espanhola e de origem no continente americano". E adivinhem: segundo a classificação deles O BRASILEIRO É HISPÂNICO. Mesmo falando PORTUGUÊS, para eles o brasileiro é hispânico. Ou seja, eles não estão nem aí para a língua q vc fala, para a sua hereditariedade ou para qualquer outro aspecto da sua cultura. Eles só estão preocupados em classificar todos, exceto eles próprios e Canadá, como um grupo de pessoas morenas oriundas d outras partes do continente americano. E as pessoas ainda acham q devemos nos considerar latinos porque estamos na "América Latina" e pq o tio Sam acha legal... tsc tsc tsc
Exato
Nao mais racista do que os brasileiros, mesmo. Povo preconceituoso. Se a divisao, fosse como anglo-saxonicos todos aceitariam numa boa.
O termo "América Latina" foi cunhado por Napoleão Bonaparte no início do século XIX ao se referir aos países recém independentes no continente americano que possuíam uma tradição latina, ou seja, que falam as línguas latinas (português, espanhol e francês) derivadas do latim, idioma falado no Império Romano. Portanto, não é um termo racista, pelo contrário, esse termo traz uma certa importância ao considerar que a nossa cultura latina é descendente da cultura dos romanos.
Matheus Leite Concordo contigo a respeito do plano de fundo da terminologia. Contudo, o que torna uma palavra racista não é a soma das letras contidas nela e sim a intenção de quem a diz. Eu me considero latino (sou descendente de espanhóis, portugueses e italianos), mas entendo que muitos brasileiros de tantas outras raízes não se considerem, simplesmente por não terem conexão com raízes latinas. Porém, se um estadunidense, ou quem quer que seja, me chamar de latino com desdém, eu arrebento a cara dele antes dele terminar a frase. E essa minha provável reação não tem nada a ver com a palavra em si, que é inofensiva e, dependendo do contexto, bem apropriada, mas sim com a intenção burra e alienada (muito comum nestes países que se acham the number one) de quem a disser.
E dai?
É um termo que eles usam no pais deles. Esses termos não se aplicam aqui dentro.
Os termos raciais no Brasil são ainda mais ridículos: branco, vermelho, pardo, amarelo, negro... e ainda é baseado na auto declaração. Pqp
Hoje em dia é tudo racismo e mimimi...
I am american (I live in America, Brazil is part of America), I am south american and I am latino too, because the portuguese language is derived from Latin.
We're Latino since Brazil is located in Latin America! OMG, ppl, wtf? Maybe they don't understand that Latino doesn't mean Spanish speaking (Hispanics) but WE ARE LATINO! Deal with that.
Rayana Barros Hispanics doesn't mean Spanish speaking, it means Iberian Speaking, Iberia is a peninsula with Spain, Andorra and Yes, Portugal, so Brazilians are both Hispanic and Latino
Oskar LOL... NO!
Usuário Do Google explain
According to the U.S Census a Hispanic is: "a person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or *other Spanish culture or origin* regardless of race."
By that logic, The United States is a Latin American country.
We brasilians are LATINOS for sure! End of discussion! Not hispanics, of course... but Latinos since we born and live in Latin America! And I'm a proud latin woman. :)
That is circular reasoning
Raquel Flores vtnc
You guys just swallow the term that the US use to non define you as American, someone who born in Europe is European, you guys born in south america, you guys ARE americans, the US just want to take themselves out the group and consider themselves superior “because i am american, best contry and so on”. We all are Americans since we born in the Americas, period!
But what is Latin America, exactly? Is Guyana in Latin America? Surinam? Quebec? The term makes no sense.
TagusMan yes. Geographically, yes.
I'm Filipino and, quite frankly, I find the Latin American culture(s) more relatable than the Asian culture(s). Even the language of my hometown has more Spanish words than Tagalog/Filipino, that's why Spanish was relatively easy for me to learn. There's also the question of whether or not Filipinos are Asians or Pacific Islanders... ¡Que complicado!
You don't have to choose. Say you're all three. Unless one of those groups does something bad, then you say you're the other two.
Larry Shakira Holaa
Id go with Pacific islander
I find a lot of similarities between Filipinos and other Southeast Asians. The cuisines are very similar with the use of fish sauce and various dishes from lechon, egg rolls, balut, and fried rice are very much eaten. Filipinos speak languages similar to Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei and East Timor. Tagalog has a lot of vocabulary from English, Chinese, Hindi, and Malay too. Eating with your hands is a very Southeast Asian thing. Calling people auntie and uncle is such a Indonesian, Malaysian, Bruneian and Singaporean thing to do as well. When don't Southeast Asians give people weird nicknames.
ok technically we can be both since we are a pacific island nation in asia just like japan and taiwan and yeah we do relate more with latin A. cultures since we were colonized by spain for 300 years
I'm brazilian, and I consider myself antes latin person. We have the same root in the language. We all derive from latin.
Você não é
Vc e ignorante isso sim.
Eu disse de MIM. Isso é muito subjetivo. Ñ falei em nome de todos e ñ vejo necessidade de agressão gratuita. Se vc não se sente, blz.
@@danibahls1 so pq vc se senti não quer dizer que vc e. Eu posso me sentir japonês mais isso não quer dizer que sou.
One more reason why, technically, we Brazilians are Latinos: our language, Portuguese, much like Spanish, French and Italian, derives from latin, therefore making them all Latin-rooted languages = Latino languages [as, you know, the word "latino" in itself means latin www.nas.org/articles/Ask_a_Scholar_What_is_the_True_Definition_of_Latino] .
True
yeah, if u speak a romance language you're latino..
pyatan serra I speak French, English, Spanish, and English.
I guess what i meant is: if your mother language is a romance language, you're latino (at least that's how I see it). All the languages you cited are romance languages, with except of the english (wich you speak twice?)
pyatan serra Yes, I agree, I thought that way too. My first language is a Romance language.
We are latinos, but not hispanics.
Brazilian and Hispanic-American are Iberian-Americans
We are neither. We are Brazilians.
But I descend from Spanish people!
we are Lusophones
Brazilian and Latino. We are both
We are LATINOS but not HISPANIC cuz in Brasil we do not speak SPANISH, but PORTUGUESE.
You do speak Spanish, a phony version of it, but you do speak Spanish.
No. I mean it. Portuguese is just another Spanish dialect that got a writing system and a dictionary, but it is the same language... it sounds weird but can understand everything. If you spoke correctly, we wouldn't even be having this discussion.
Rafael Batista Entiendo todo, pero se escribe 'mucho', no 'muito'. Los índices de analfabetismo en ese país son increíbles.
Germain Martel hahaha TROLL !!!
Germain Martel O Português é mais antigo que seu espanhol !! Hahaha
Girl! I'm Brazilian...I'm Latino....and I love you!!!!
Latino is any country with a latin derived language. So, Portugal and Spain, Italy and others in Europe can be considered LATINO.
From this perspective, Brazil IS latino.
But if you consider LATINO as the racial/stereotypical view created in USA, then only countries from LATIN AMERICA are LATINOS.
BUT in this case, Brazil doesn't have similarities with that american view of what LATINO means, therefore they don't recognize themselves in that word.
In conclusion, the answer to that question will the depend on what your perspective of LATINO means.
edit1: but the correct perspective is the first one, obviously.
edit2: latin america would only make sense culturally (and means the same thing-> the countries in the americas that derive from a romance culture/latin language. Geographically the correct term is south america.
Exactly!
Lewis Shiva Sooo trueeeee! You got it!
As a latino portuguese, thank you both :)
Perfectly stated. People need to start to think of French people as Latin people to break the stereotypes and start to focus on the former definition of what Latin means.
The US spreading their bs to the world, whats new??
I'm brazilian and I love being latina. It's not an issue for me.
A criança que nasce na Colômbia filha de pai Colombiano afro-descendente e mãe Polaca, com 5 anos de idade se muda com os pais que decidem morar na Rússia e desejam que o filho cresça falando apenas o idioma Russo, será considerada latina ou eslava? Portanto eu sou brasileiro , sulamericano , luso-falante e quero ser reconhecido apenas como tal! E desafio qualquer um aqui a debater sobre isto.
Brazilians arent Latino
I was born and raised in Brazil, which is in Latin America, so I consider myself a latina.
You dont speak spanish so you do not pass for Hispanic or latina. Only Spanish speaking countrys do.
To me, Brazil is like a person who's that sexy, but weird, and thicc girl with internal issues that hung around with a group long enough to be seen at a part of family.
Well... as a brasilian I'm surprised with this video, I never noticed brasilians does't identify themselves as latinos... I think we just don't use this word much, probably because we don't need to.
I don't mind being called latino
But I DO GET MAD If someone ever calls us "latinx"
Latinx is just awful.
Why is latinx bad? Actually my asking wit respect and really just curious.
I'm Brazilian and I'm proud to be Latino.
Just normal reals latinos, not "ticanos". Thanks, obrigada! 😊
Tanyusha Tanyzinha what's a ticano?
But the real latino term, pueblos que descienden de la Roma antigua
Exactly!
+Diego Guillermo Schmidt Yeah, for sure. I consider myself a "real" latina but there's many brazilians that are not even "fakes" latinos.
So yes, we speak a latim language but could you consider all of us a real latinos? 😞
Joanna, it is indeed complicated.The term "Latino" is more like an American statistic/ demographic term that loosely means Latin American, but not really. In demographic/statistical terms, American confuse the concept of Race/Ethnicity with origin/country. This is what makes the thing confusing....
For example: Uruguay and Argentina are the countries with the most whites in all of the Americas. So does that make them Latinos or Whites in the American Census concept? You tell me.
As for us Brazilians, we may draw parallel with the Russians, who don´t consider themselves neither Europe nor Asia. It´s kind of the same thing here in Brazil, we may not have a strong Latin American identity, specially because we are the only Portuguese speaking country in the Region and although we share a somewhat similar background with other South American neighbours, distances are so great that the majority of the population doesnt have much contact with the Spanish language...
as a uruguayan you have no idea how confusing that is oh my god i call myself both white and latina whenever it suits the conversation best
thank god i dont live in the usa because i would go insane
florome well it doesn't have to be that confusing, I'm Colombian but I'm like pale as a sheet of paper. So I just say I'm white and Latino because Latino is not a race. After all. Every culture that comes from the roman empire is a Latino culture.
Walabix Ha!
Latin culture. Latino is just a made-up political word in USA to refer to peoples from the Americas
Are Jamaicans latinos then?
Diego Uzeda bravo!!!!
I am brazilliam and i've never heard someone saying that we're not latinos.
Latino, just not Hispanic
brazilian are luso-americans, not latinos. If Brazilians are Latino, then people from Quebec are Latino too. Suriname speaks Dutch.
yeah smartass, lemme just walk around sayin "oh, oh no... i'm LUSO-american, you know the same ways white north americans are anglo-americans or nordic-americans."
e mais a europa tem como paíes latinos Itália, a França, Portugal, a Romênia e a Espanha
yes, so am i. but to be fair i never heard someone say we are. we just dont use this word
98% of americans thinks that Brazil speaks spanish!!
But other 2% of americans knows that Brazil speaks portuguese, but they think that the portuguese is Just a dialect of Spanish!!!!🤣
2% think Brazil speaks Brazilian
@@gbr22br63 o nosso Português é mais próximo da língua galega do que do português de Portugal. Depois procure vídeos de galegos falando, o sotaque é bem mais fácil de entendermos do que a um português falando. O Galego era o português arcaico falado no norte de Portugal, até que a Galícia foi anexada à espanha, e o galego sofreu interferencias do espanhol, enquanto o Portugues de portugal continuou em mutação com o passar do séculos. Hoje em dia o português e o Galego dividem 85% do léxico do idioma. É uma lingua linda!!!!!
@@eddy.silva32 Tá mais pra q isso fio? KKKK Brincadeira concordo com vc, nossa língua é linda
Cara, tenho muito orgulho de ter o português como língua nativa. Ainda nascido na Zona Norte de SP,
Onde nasceu Ayrton Senna.
The meaning of "latino" is one of the most confusing things in the world. People say it has nothing to do with the ethnicity, but with the origin of the spoken language: we are Latin because we speak portuguese ... But Angolans also speak portuguese. People born in Angola are Latin? And the people who are born in Jamaica and speak English, or in Suriname and speak Dutch, are what? Besides, nobody calls canadians, americans, english and australians Anglo-Saxons...
Then they say that "latinos" are those who live in South and Central America... Well, if that were the case, why would North Americans call the descendants of "Latinos" that are born and live there Latinos as well?
And if we consider the history of the countries, it complicates the matter even more. Each "Latin America" country had different stories, some with drastically different details from others.
"Latinos" is a term that causes more confusion than organization. I would suggest we abandon it completely.
Cara é bastante simples na verdade.
Se você fala português,espanhol,italiano ou francês você é um latino porque essas são línguas de origem no latim (por isso agente costuma se entender bastante).
As pessoas (principalmente nos EUA) gostam de esteriotipizar latinos dizendo que na maioria são pessoas de pele morena,que falam espanhol e gostam de bailar,e por isso muitos portugueses,franceses e italianos não se consideram latinos.
Então sim,pessoas de Angola são latinos.
E até canadenses podem ser latinos já que tem uma parte do país deles que fala francês (quebec).
O termo correto seria linguas românticas.
Lucy Vai dizer isso para os Nortamericanos e Canadenses. Además, vários estados dos EUA tem cidades inteiras que ainda preservam idioma e costumes hispânicos (estão lá desde antes da independência dos EUA, que antes eram só a costa leste), nem por isso os estados que em teoria são "latinos", se veem como tal. Latino é em via de regra um termo pejorativo para todos que são muito diferentes do povo dos Estados Unidos da América.
Sim, Lucy, a coisa é bastante simples... Só que não.
Vê se algum português, espanhol ou francês se considera "latino"... Ou se nos EUA alguém chama um angolano de latino... Parece-me que a coisa vai muito além da mera origem da língua falada.
Ateu, e daí?
Não é porque eles não se considerem latinos que eles não sejam.A maior parte da população dos EUA mal deve saber oque significa o termo Anglo-Saxonico mesmo eles estarem encaixados nesse termo.
Agora vou responder sobre esses costumes "latinos" nos EUA.
Essas cidades do EUA que você mencionou tem línguas latinas como segunda língua.Só isso já é o suficiente pra provar que os EUA não faz parte dessa dominação porque tem que ter uma língua proviniente do latim como língua oficial para ser considerado latino,e não como segunda língua.Esses "costumes" não tornam um país latino porque como já disse essa denominação está direcionada a língua e não à uma raça.
Essa confusão toda foi causada por esse esteriótipo dos EUA que dizem que latino é uma raça,quando naverdade se trata de uma denominação para as pessoas que falam línguas provinientes do latim.Acontece que os EUA acabam influenciando outros países e por conta disso portugueses,franceses e italianos não se consideram latinos até porque muitos não tem interesse em saber então acaba ficando por isso mesmo.E nós brasileiros acabamos fazendo a mesma coisa.Esse esteriótipo é tão grande que muitos hispânicos acabam acreditando no mesmo oque contribui mais uma vez para os latinos da europa(eu sei que é um pouco esquisito falar isso mas é assim que se fala) não se considerarem latinos.
E para provar que franceses e tal SÃO LATINOS:
pt.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europa_latina
Is Angola's first language Portuguese? If yes then yes they are.
Are Portuguese Latinos? Obviously yes, they are.
The problem is exactly that the word turned into a buzz word for 'ethnic' identification.
Just drop the word Latino yes, it makes no sense-
Latino just means that the mother tongue in your country derives from latin. Exp: Spanish, Italian, French, and yes.. Portuguese :) So yeah, Brazil is a Latin American country, therefore, brazilians are Latinos! :D
steff7777777 viv Ayiti!
steff7777777 actually nop...the word for languages wich comes from Latin is Romance not latino...
"Latino is an adjective that comes from the word 'latinus' which refers to that which is natural from the peoples that speak languages that derive from latin." You're welcome, sir.
steff7777777 google it! Or do some more research, adding "us", don't make your point... the correct word is Romance 😊
Nicolas Uribe Lenguas latinas or romances are the same thing. Also known as Lenguas romanicas. They all come from Latin
The problem is that latino is a linguistic classification so italians, french, portuguese, spanish and romanians are also latinos. But people in the USA use latino as a "race" and "culture" term, so basically what happens is that if you say you are latino, they think you eat spicy food and dress like a mariachi while shouting "AY AY AY" which are just mexican stereotypes. So that's why me as a brazilian don't like that term, it doesn't represent us. Is just like saying that United States, Germany and Jamaica are all "germanic", and treat it like a culture and race, imagine that: Hitler, Adam Sandler and Bob Marley would be considered the same race and the same culture, does that make sense? And I don't want to be rude, but as a brazilian the only latin american countries that I think there is some similarities with us is Uruguay and Argentina (they are similar to southern brazilian culture) and some parts of northern brazil may share some cultural ties with Venezuela and Colombia, but the two most populated areas (Southeast and Northeast) in Brazil aren't connected to any latin american country, neither geographically nor culturally. So to the average brazilian, most latin american countries are just as distant culturally from us as USA and Canada are, we actually share more cultural similarities with Portugal (and Italy in some parts of Brazil) than with our neighbors. Even Brazil doesn't represent us very well, the culture that most people think as "brazilian" is just Rio de Janeiro city culture (samba, bossa nova, carnival with fantasies and big colored cars) that don't apply to most part of the country, the rest of the country have very different cultures. To foreigners understand imagine the US. It is a big country with a bunch of cultural differences between the states, now imagine the whole world only knew New Orleans and thought of your entire country as a big New Orleans, that's what happens to Brazil. So we are already too misrepresented worldwide as brazilians, being classified as latino just make it worse.
Exactly! I understand that Latin Americans in the US feel like they need to re-appropriate the term and use it with a positive connotation, but the problem is that it just doesn't make any sense outside the US. So the rest of the Latin American community in the entire world end up discussing a term that white US people invented because the insist on calling themselves "Americans". So yeah, I refuse to identify with a name that has such huge imperialistic connotations attached to it, and to a lot of people that ends up sounding like I'm not proud of my Latin American identity or something. :'(
Americans have pretty weird racial vision in general. They don't consider Jews white. and I've seen some americans saying that portuguese, spaniards and italians aren't white also. In USA I would never be considered white even though I look caucasian with light skin and blond hair. but I have some native brazilian blood in me. so maybe I would be considered native even though I'm mostly of european descent. Americans are very very confused about races.
So you basically want the word to see the white side of Brazil?
Because you do not like foreigners think as Brazilian culture carnival or bossanova, you prefer foreings see the similarities Brazil has with Europe because "White is better". Even thought you are White (or white passing) that is just very sad, you have some inner racism going on. Hope you work on that.
I'm not saying european culture is better, I'm just saying that what the world perceive as being typical brazilian is actually the culture of a specific region of Brazil. There's a bunch of regions in Brazil with strong amerindian and african culture, but most foreigners have never heard or seen these places, North Brazil for example has a lot of native tradition and Bahia has the strongest African culture in Brazil and I would say in all of the American continent, but very few foreigners know that because they are too focused on Rio. I was born in a region dominated by caipira culture, which is a result of native brazilian and portuguese culture, here the traditional music is sertanejo raiz, which contains elements of portuguese music like acordeon and guitar, and the lyrics talk about the life of the caipira most of the time, which lived in the countryside. Where I'm currently living it is also part of the caipira culture but here there is also some African influenced practices like the congadas, which is a catholic religious feast where people plays drums and most of the players are blacks. And also Bossa Nova is a typically upper class white people music here in Brazil, the great majority of worker class brazilians don't care about bossa nova, and samba is typically most appreciated in Rio and São Paulo city, they play samba at bars there, but the rest of Brazil don't care that much about samba, in the north, northeast, central-west, large parts of southeast and south, you will hardly find samba being played, each region here has its own typical musical genres and dances. My intention was not to diminish African influence in Brazil, I only wanted to show that Brazil is much more than Rio. Also I forgot to mention that carnival has european origin.
Mary from the Rosary no offense, but I don't think Brazil is the only example of diversity... I mean, in Mexico we don't play mariachi or cumbia all the time, most of the people prefer pop, rock or ballads. And I think that for every country the foreigners focus in the cliches to make a culture different from the others... But I got it, I don't consider myself as "Latina" either, even though I'm not white, I find that classification simplistic and stupid, I prefer to be called mestiza if you're talking about race, or Mexican if you're considering the culture...
But technically we all share the same language tree, so we all are Latin people including Latin European and Latin Americans.
In any case I prefer the term "Latin" or "Latin American", what for me is more accurate and less stereotyped.
As a Brazilian, when I lived in USA I felt that 90% of the time that I was being called Latina, the intention was to put me in a Box w the rest of Latin America, but to be fair, even tho there are many things in Brazil different from other countries in Latin America, we have similarities. When I went to any Mexican restaurant (Brazilian food is completely different than Mexican, just to be clear) but the taste reminded me of my home. So even tho is not the same, it has similarities. What makes Brazilians angry about that is the lack of respect for our country, ppl call us Latinos bc of an accent or bc of our color and already assume that we are Hispanic! WE ARE NOT HISPANIC AT ALL! (Which is not a bad thing just to be clear, but that’s not what we are). But when I hang out w my Hispanic friends, their houses, their families and even their lifestyle are similar to mine! So I understand the similarities, the only thing that bothers me is that Americans don’t care at all about geography and put all Latinos in the “Mexican Box” without caring about our culture. I’m Latina, I’m Brazilian, I speak Portuguese and I have my own Culture, just like the other countries in Latin America. We are different, yes, but when you go to another country, full of gringos, is amazing to feel that you belong in a group, make you feel confident and comfortable. And even tho we are not the same, we have things in common, and that’s good!
Well, I'm Brazilian and I consider myself Latina... Just not Hispanic. Besides, I'm so happy you made a video about Brazil, Joanna! I was waiting for this!
Letícia Rezende you're right
Letícia Rezende "consider"🙄
i speak spanish and i dont consider myself hispanic, i have never heard anyone say that word in my country, i think of myself as latino and i would always be glad to be in the same group as brasilians they are the best and only one who dont hate us in south america lol, im from chile btw.
Hispanic is a word wrongly used by u.s people to refer to spanish-speaking people. It annoys me because Hispanic refers to the ancient Hispania (Iberian peninsula) in the times of Roman Empire
Não me considero latino de jeito nenhum
I have literally never heard any brazilian say that we're not. Why the hell wouldn't we be? hahah
Because we actually don't think about it. I mean, if you never left your contry, you just don't think about this. But i know, brazillian are latinos
We're not.
EUA ERE ANGLO AMERICANS
nornally because there are some Brazilians that think Latins are Spanish speakers in Larin America. I dont agree with that! we are Latins, in terms of Language (originally from Latin) and by region! hahahha I think the ones that do not consider Brazilians Latin they should study a little bit hahah
As I consider myself as American. Remembering South America is also America hahaha
Não sou latino.
Sabe qual o problema da palavra "latino"?: é que ela é usada de uma forma pejorativa.
Danilo Souza Mexicanos destruíram nossa reputação :V
Dr. Elijah mexicanos não destruíram nada nos brasileiros nos destruímos sozinhos
P H ?
Os latinos do Sul da Europa são em geral mal vistos pelos europeus do Norte, assim como os latino-americanos são mal vistos pelos americanos do Norte (EUA), pra eles os latinos são pessoas desleixadas que só pensam em festas e diversão.
e isso seria um problema se a gente tivesse que dar satisfação aos EUA (país tão sem graça que nem nome tem)
Hii good night! Im from Soult America, and I have a question " why the people from U.S.A is considered American if America is a continent?"
Yara Moraes because it’s The United States Of AMERICA
It’s the easiest thing to call ourselves. We’ve been doing it for over 200 years so I don’t think it’s going to change. Obviously it isn’t ideal linguistically, but it’s better than United Statesian.
Everyone else calls us Americans too.
Você é americano? Sim, sim, eu sou americano!
aqui nos USA e no Canadá, não ensinam que são subcontinentes, e sim 2 CONTINENTES diferentes, América do sul e do norte.
Então para os EUA, Canadá e outros paises como Inglaterra e Índia, não existe o CONTINENTE AMERICANO.
Logo se não existe, não tem pq os Brasileiros serem chamados de Americans.
Não é sub para nós, são 2 continentes diferentes tipo a a África e Europa.
@@JorgefromtheO e a partir de quando essa divisão em 2 continentes passou a valer pra eles? E você imagina com o intuito de quê? Talvez evitar uma certa dualidade? Porque o gentílico Usoniano não pegou nos Estados Unidos, né? Aí é mais fácil dobrar todo o resto.
-You are latin because you are from Latin America.
-Ok.
-You are Latin because you speak Spanish.
-WAR DECLARED!
I have a question:
If we are Latin because we speak romantic languages, why don't have a "Latin Europe", "Latin Africa" and why the French speakers from Canada aren't Latin?
Artur Lima there actually is a Latin Europe. But Europeans don’t care too much for it. However, speaking as a Hispanic I think that we took the word Latino and ran with it. Now we are proud of the called Latinos. Even if we are from different countries the majority of us are listening to the same music, and eating more or less the same food. We are all proud of each other’s success, even if they are not from our country. If one Latino does something good or bad it reflects on the entire community.
I am Latin European and we do consider ourselves Latin European, just not Latin American. Latin Europeans are: French, Italian, Romanian, Spaniards and Portuguese. We all speak different languages.
Portugal y espana siempre han estado juntos desde gue la peninsula era una Isla , la gente de Portugal crusa a espana sin permiso de frontera existe una calle libre gue pueden cruzar gente de Portugal o espana sin permiso como amigos
Ruben Gonzales eso no es exclusivo de España y Portugal, pasa igual en todos los países de la Unión Europea!
Artur Lima latin Europe exist since 2000 years my friend... and still does
es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europa_latina
es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultura_latina
And politically, within the UE, latin countries we have our own informal group (+greece)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EU_Med_Group
Geographically, yes
Linguistically, yes (even french and italians are in this case)
Culturally (including political tendencies, food, sports, music), YES! YES! YES!
There's Candombe (talking about music) in Uruguay and when you listen to it, it sounds a lot like african influenced music in Brazil. Evolution occurred after all the different cultures collided, but it doesn't take away the fact that we are latinos.
Yes Brasil has the largest japanese population outside Japan, and H-U-G-E (trump-like H-U-G-E) influence from italians and arab nations, with some german/dutch thrown in the middle... but none of that takes away the fact that we are latinos. Period.
Great video btw...
prob someone else pointed this out, but the google lady is from Portugal :)
oi primo
If we think being Latino because of language, actually French, italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, even tho they are in europe, they are also latins. which I find the only explanation to call SOUTH AMERICANS "latinos", because we come from Latin language.
Exactly, I have read that the word Latin America was something introduced by the french to make latin american countries feel "closer" to the European counterparts, through the language. And these sub-qualifications are very common around the world. The significance only depends on us.
I see no problem, after centuries, change the original meaning of 'latino' to mean people with, somewhat similar cultures/backgrounds. Carnival is an equally festive date in most of the countries as is most other catholic dates, Food is similar (at least the ingredients), music isn't far off either. And it is much easier for a Brazilian who doesn't speak any other language to understand a Spanish speaker (slowly and all) than any other language.
You forgot to say we also have the biggest African population outside Africa. We’re sooooo weird! Our multitude of phenotypes is so vast our passports are valued by thieves kkkkkkkkkkkkkk
Muito verdade! Could not agree more... Latins... Period...
A better question is whether "Latino" is a word we need.
Robert Johnson we need the word, but not as its used in the USA
We sure as hell do. What should be discussed is whether or not we use the term latino, but try to get rid of the negative meanings to the term. There's no harm in latinos calling each other latinos.
This is 100% a USA problem. It's them using it as a derogatory term towards brown people that ''changed'' the meaning of the word.
''There's no harm in latinos calling each other latinos.''
No, but Imagine if me a white/blonde Portuguese went to Miami and told some Puerto-Rican that I'm a Latino too lol
Rei Bob well done, thanks to your very precise words
Latin is an old obsolete language. If the word "latino" has a negative connotation, that's on the US
As a Filipino (trying to learn Spanish so I stumbled here... hey, you're fun!) we have Hispanic roots and influences (and blood probably) but not Hispanic -- a lot of our language is influenced by spanish words, and some towns/cities still speak a Spanish-creole dialect
Filipinos still has a native language as a speakers majority...and this southeast asian country is closer to Indonesia than it's to Spain no?It's a country of hispanic heritage but if you classify a majority ethnic-native population as a european colonization vestige is a little disrespectful(my opinion)...Brazil is mostly a country of European(Italian and Portuguese mainly) descend,but we don't wanna classify themselves based on the people who colonized us...it's okay if some people wanna identify as a hispanic...but what about who is not?that's a question about cultural tolerance😅the native peoples of Americas feels disrespected hearing this word...
You’re Asian 😂😂😂
@@Lucas-cf6kxItalian ? Lol more Germans migrated to Brazil than Italians
Lol Filipino are the mixed family member who is sometimes invited and sometimes not. But at least you’re not like our forgotten cousin the Romanian who is rarely mentioned in Romance languages
That portuguese in the end is from Portugal not Brazil!! Love the video ❤
Se for assim, não existe América Latina.
Eu sou brasileira e vivo na Argentina, atualmente. Eu sempre me considerei latina, mas o que me chocou aqui foi descobrir que a maioria dos meus amigos hispanohablantes daqui, não me considerava latina e justificavam com o fato de eu não falar espanhol. A gente ficou um bom tempo conversando e argumentando sobre isso kkkkkkkkkkkk
Eu não me considero, e a grande maioria dos brasileiros não. Estamos culturalmente afastados do restante da américa latina, mas ainda assim em geral nos sentimos líderes deles. Estranho hein
"Uma pesquisa inédita de opinião pública confirmou o que a história e o senso comum já sugeriam: o brasileiro despreza a América Latina, mas ao mesmo tempo se vê como líder nato da região.
Apenas 4% dos brasileiros se definem como latino-americanos, ante uma média de 43% em outros seis países latinos (Argentina, Chile, Colômbia, Equador, México e Peru).
E mais: quem mora no Brasil avalia que o país seria o melhor representante da América Latina no Conselho de Segurança da ONU, mas não quer livre trânsito de latinos por suas fronteiras nem priorizar a região na política externa."
@@sirbjergsen308 Eu me considero e muito.
To achando novidade achar brasucas que não se veem como latinos.
"Eu só sou um cara latino americano sem dinheiro no banco"
@@carlospc223 90% da população não se considera. Vc tá numa bolha de uns 4%
@@carlospc223 it’s like that belchior song
Então moça... 95% de chance de você não ser latina.
The audio at the end of the video: portuguese portuguese, not brazilian portuguese, not our fault!
Mariana Paz E o que foi dito que só entendi "joanna e eu.."?? hahaha
Gabi Oliveira sim, eu entendi foi nada hahaha
Mariana Paz eu falo português de Portugal e não percebi portanto...
Mariana Paz - Porque seus comentário está na Língua de Shakespeare! Shakespeare é uma Abstração!
O termo "latino" é parte da construção da identidade comum entre os falantes de espanhol. O Brasil naturalmente não participou desta construção. É apenas uma questão de ter chegado atrasado na festa e ficar com vergonha de comer o bolo. Brasileiros se enxergam como... brasileiros e nada mais... parecido com o que acontece com os britânicos em relação a Europa, por exemplo: Portugal tem orgulho de ser europeu, Reino Unido tem orgulho de ser... o Reino Unido.
Indigenous+Other Ethnicities= Latino
@@Handobolo Brazilian is Black + Portuguese, barelly native, Just look How we are aliens to you
"É apenas uma questão de ter chegado atrasado na festa e ficar com vergonha de comer o bolo." KKKKKKKKK faz sentido
Shut up man you are Latino.
@@Handobolo No, los latinos son europeos nativos de Italia.
Los latinos son blancos.
Well, the word "Hispanic" is actually derived from Hispania, which is a historical region contains Spain and Portugal
and Latin America is countries which use a Latin root language, they including Spanish, Portuguese, and even French. So technically, Haiti is a Latin America country
Juliana Silva they weren't talking about Brazil they were talking about Hispania(the region were Spain and Portugal are) which use to be the Iberian peninsula's name
But the "Hispania" is how the Iberian Penisula used to be called in the Roman Empire. Today, the modern classification is Iberian. Also, Portuguese people call themselves as Lusitanians and call "Hispanics" just countries culturally linked to Spain (and I think in Spain they have the same classification)
@Egy Rinaldi-Putra By this definition, Quebec is also latin america, 'case they speak french.
"But they used to be the same language" Yeah, the latin language; and by this definition Italy, France, Spain, and Portugal are the Latin world as well.
Egy Rinaldi-Putra Canadá is latino as well. They are French speakers, just like Haiti. Suriname is not Latin, they speak Dutch.
Somos latinos. Todos.
The languages are not the same, but they are so similar, even to the extent that in the borders a Portuñol dialect emerges. Our cultures, though very distinct from country to country, share so much.
Brazilian colonization was made so we antagonized Spanish colonies, and literally for hundreds of years we only cared about the coast, to Portugal, Europe. I understand that brazilians don't feel connected or related, but it's past time we start to activally seek for this lost link.
I think that Brazil as a country will only be successful with we advance together with our neighbors.
I've lived in Mexico for a year, as an exchange student, and at first wasn't really atracted to the idea of going there. I wanted to go to Europe, but chance got me there. I'm so grateful to get to know Mexican people, Mexican culture, food. In the end, I think that what get brazilians to say that they aren't Latino is prejudice, ignorance.
If Brazil has identity crisis, imagine the Guyanas!! haha bless them
i was thinking the same hahhaa
05:20 - Porguguês by Portugal (The video is about Brazil)!
I am brazilian, and I just started identifing myself as a Latino when I moved to China and realized only other Latin Americans could understand the reality of my country and culture. In that moment I understood that YES, we are part of one group.
Caraca, q lindo!
Xorei
If you go to an Asian country (that has a very exotic culture for most Brazilians), probably even an American would understand better the reality of the American continent than the Asians do...
Fato
@@guruxara7994 not really. Because I am talking about identifing myself as a latino in the middle of foreigners from all over the world.
Only my friends from Latin America could understand my reality, while the other foreigners (from the USA, Europe etc) had nothing to do with me.
We, Latinos, shared songs, dances and food. It was awesome.
I'm from Argentina and I can 100% confirm we're Emilio Estévez
Eu não estive, mas o Emilio Estevez :v
Gio Zaffini so you're saying you are white?
Bro hahahahahahhahahah
luis suarez He's just saying that some of us argentinians have some kind of God Complex and think themselves as european just because of their last name
I think you meant where?
Notification squad where u at???
I consider myself 100% Latina, who speaks Hialeah Spanish with a Brazilian accent and LOVE it 💗
More Joanna rants!! Thank you Joanna!!
We are latinos. We speak a language arisen from latin, we have iberian heritage, we have similar behaviors, we are all part of the same motherland: Latin America. It's natural to think we wouldn't fit in because we see how in the US hispanic imigrants are fit in the category "latino" very perversely, but in a deeper look we have more in common than we think. I hope one day we can languish the borders separating us and consume Bolivar's dream.
I live in a town Framingham ma that has about 20,000 Brazilians e the censes doesn't counts them as white cus it says Hispanic not latino they are latino not hispanic
I would agree we all come from an Iberian culture.
Quebeq, French guiane? I am B R A Z I L I A N
One of the reasons brazilians dont consider themselves latinos is because most of brazilian population lives along the coast, thousands of kilometers from other "latinos nations" in america.. I personaly only saw one person speaking spanish in my entire life living in Brazil.
these people from the United States want to be recognized as the only America, so they are called Americans, and Americans are all those who are from America> argentina > Brasil > eua > méxico and canadar, we are all americans
I'm brazilian and I consider myself latina. I didn't know that brazilian people don't consider themselves latinos. uai eu não sabia que tinha brasileiro que não se considerava latino, mano nós estamos na américa latina.
kkk é o msm que falar "sou do Pernambuco mas não me considero nordestina" doidera
Não é que não consideramos, mas acho que a maioria não está nem aí pra isso, eu pelo menos acho perca de tempo entrar nesse assunto.
Eu nao me considero latina
E é pq tipo
Uma coisa é fzr parte da América latina
Outra coisa é fzr parte da cultura latina
E são coisas q dependem uma da outra
E como o brasil n faz parte da cultura
Podemos discutir se somos ou n latinos
Parece até que quando vamos nos apresentar pra alguém de fora tem que falar tudo... Eu por exemplo seria bem assim "Oi, sou paulistana, paulista, sudestina, brasileira, sul americana, latina americana e cidadã do mundo" putz q perca de tempo, se tu tá no brasil fala q é de tal estado e cidade e se for no exterior fala que é brasileira, bem mais prático do q essa discussão se é latino ou não.
faz sentido
Nós somos latinos porque, culturalmente, historicamente e politicamente, nós temos bastante semelhanças com nossos vizinhos hispano-americanos, além do mais, derivamos nossas línguas da cultura latina.
Então é daí que vem o termo, países que falam linguas latinas. É só isso.
Não mesmo.
Nossa história de independência é diferente. Não tivemos uma civilização indígena. Nossos pratos típicos, roupas, danças e folclore é único com algumas ressalvas. Entenda que o termo se aplica unicamente à localização geografica e linguística. Culturalmente somos brasileiros - só.
@@Yostheou Concordo. As pessoas tendem a pensar que ser latino é uma identidade. E não, é uma questão de geografia e diferenciação por idioma. Mas pergunte a um Canadense, da parte francesa, se ele é Latino, já que o Francês é um idioma Latino, e eu recebi como resposta: "It's complicated". E para me explicarem o porque a Guiana Francesa é considerada latina se ela ainda é pertecente a França (país europeu) que é lingua oficial no canadá mas não se vÊ como latino...(?!)
@@Yostheou mano aceita que voce eh latino cafuza pardão, no seu dna deve ter até asiaticos, para com essa sindrome de vira lata de tentar bancar o branco europeu, pros extrangeiros nós vamos sempre ser latinos PORQUE NOS SOMOS LATINOS KRL PARA DE MIMIMI, a gente mora na america latina, em um país de terceiro mundo, miscigenado e com o estereotipo tipico de um país latino vey, até o haiti eh menos latino que o brasil
@@Yostheou você acha que nós não somos latinos pq vc sente que somos superiores aos nossos vizinhos?
Eu sou apenas um rapaz, Latino Americano! Sem dineiro no banco! Sem parentes importantes!
E vindo do interior
It's like, we brazilians are very different from the Hispanics, and when you talk about latinos, the first thing in your mind are Hispanics (speaking Spanish woooow). Thats why many of us don't feel that we are latinos. But yes, we are latinos.
Exactly. Best comment. Brazilians are Latinos, but not Hispanics.
Brazilians are latinos, we are in latin america, we have latin heritage, we speak a latin language. Seems like these brazilians that don't see themselves as latinos just want to be seen as white/not south american by the rest of the world
It's not that at all
Latin americans seems like a thing people from the USA use to put south american people all in the same basket. And that's not okay, because it's ignoring my entire huge huge culture. We come from all over the place. We're white and black and yellow and blue and so mixed that you can't tell where we're from just from looking at us. And our culture is mixed, so mixed that we don't know where things come from. And that's beautiful. That's wonderful. And saying "oh, I'm latina" just doesn't do it justice.
If you want to lable me, lable me south american. Brazilian. That's fine. Because if the argument is that our language derives from latin therefore we must be all the same, why don't we call north americans "anglo-saxonic people"? That seems right, doesn't it?
You can very easily call us Anglo-Saxon folks, but at that point it becomes more a question of racial background as well. If "Anglo-Saxonic" were anywhere near as catchy as "Latino," we'd readily adopt that name. :)
+Ethan Smith it's really weird for the rest of the world how everything is about race for you people from Anglo-Saxonic America.
We are brazilians and latinos
And every brazilian who thinks otherwise is geographically wrong
Quer fzr um teste põe uma salsa e veja se seu corpo fica parado
Loved this video, thank you!
As a light skinned, black curly haired Brazilian(born in Belo Horizonte, BR), I’m often perceived as either, Italian, Israeli/Mediterranean, French or Greek. After 4 years attending school in Boston and living in LA for almost 20 years, I’m perceived as an east coaster and when asked about my heritage(stated above), the vast majority of the inquirers, are surprised by my actual origin. So...I consider myself a Non-Hispanic Latino. When I say that, most people scratch their heads and ask how that works. I simply explain that, Brazilian speak Portuguese.
This video was awesome. I loved it! And I love Brasil! They are amazing peopl, very kind and sweet, and the country is so beautiful, except if we talk about football, then they are our enemieeeeees! (I'm from Argentina, that's why)
"weird, polically unpredictable and economic volatile family" That's us, that's brazil nothing sums it up better than this sentence
Why you're so angry??? I am brazilian and I CONSIDER MYSELF LATINA! And I'm proud of this.
We are Latinos easy , next
No, we are not.
Ah então foda se
comentário lindo
No es lo mismo latino que hispano... creo que ese es el origen de la confusión.
NÓS somos latinos sim, não tem discussão, é um fato, só nascendo de novo num país anglo-saxão pra não ser
We don't feel like we don't fit in, we just don't really give a shit about Latino.
He likes to destroy good music, so we try to pretend he is not there. Kkkk
Luana Soares kkkk
kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
melhor comentário hahahahah
Melhor piada interna possível para esta situação kkkkkk
uhahahahahha best joke ever
Brazilian shouldn't fill isolated to all latinos and hispanics they are our brothers
You are smart my friend!
Of corse! I don't get why we brazilians feel so different from the other countries of Latin America. We are all hermanos!
@@angelicelly_904 we are the only ones that speak portuguese here tho
@@g.m.7416 Yeah but in French Guiana people speak French, and in Guiana people speak English. We are not the only ones that don't speak Spanish in Latin America.
♡ as a brazilian I beg your pardon for all the stupid brazilians, and of course we are latino
Why do Brazilians have to be "Latinos"? 🙄 I'm not Latino, I don't live in Vaticano, I don't speak Latin language and I don't live in an unique culture...