I am Luso-Brasileiro and I live in London. Spain and Portugal are very similar, place like Galicia, Portugal, Nigerian, Congo, Angola and indigenes mixed in America (continent) created a culture similar in Brazil, Uruguay, Florida, Cuba, Costa Rica and Antilles.
Dude Portuguese and Spanish are ones of the most similar languages… so much so that they are mostly mutually intelligible. Pai e mae (shortened version of papai e mamae) are like papa and mamma/maman of other latin languages….
Portuguese was originally a dialect of Spanish also and they have similar ethnic grouos like triracial/mixed race/mulatto and also Spanish/Portuguese white and also African
All of the vocabulary similarities (except for canoa) are probably due to the two iberean languages influencing each other. Canoa is interesting because this is in fact a word from indigenous origin, more specifically from the Arawak
I think when PRs start informing others about their own history it would be more appropriate when bringing up the Spanish ties to stop referring to them as the oppressor when we actually are the descendants of these people…. We speak there language and have there culture…. We need to accept all aspects of our dna heritage and stop referring to they as them.
The thing with Brazil is the people are not much the "colonized" ones, like you said both countries were forced to speak spanish and portuguese, but rather the brazilian people comes from the colonizers themselves. Like the root ancestry of brazilians are portuguese settlers and not much the indigenous people.
this is a very small minority, most people in brasil are descendants from a mix of African Portuguese and indigenous. only a minority mostly in North East rural are full decent Portuguese, otherwise they are usually decent from Italian German Japanese or Arab immigrants
@@digao726And even then, in Puerto Rico, most of the indigenous population died and very little survived, one quick google search and it says “by 1550 we’re near extinct” and 30 years prior it says there 1148 tainos left, a fair amount of whom would have been mixed with Europeans, not say to there culture didn’t survive, it partly did, just there genetics, not as much
@@CastIronBathTubyeah in Puerto Rico there are virtually no native taino speakers, whereas in brasil there are many first language speakers of Tupi-Guarani and other indigenous languages
@@digao726In Brazil there are many indigenous still thriving as in Paraguay, not so much in Puerto Rico though, do to the fact that it was easily colonizable and disease
this applies to most of northern south america, and somewhat to the rest of latin america. it is an interesting connection but it is not surprising
I am Luso-Brasileiro and I live in London. Spain and Portugal are very similar, place like Galicia, Portugal, Nigerian, Congo, Angola and indigenes mixed in America (continent) created a culture similar in Brazil, Uruguay, Florida, Cuba, Costa Rica and Antilles.
Amazing vídeo bro 👍🏻
Dude Portuguese and Spanish are ones of the most similar languages… so much so that they are mostly mutually intelligible.
Pai e mae (shortened version of papai e mamae) are like papa and mamma/maman of other latin languages….
Portuguese was originally a dialect of Spanish also and they have similar ethnic grouos like triracial/mixed race/mulatto and also Spanish/Portuguese white and also African
All of the vocabulary similarities (except for canoa) are probably due to the two iberean languages influencing each other.
Canoa is interesting because this is in fact a word from indigenous origin, more specifically from the Arawak
Underrated video 🔥
Hazte la parte 2
I think when PRs start informing others about their own history it would be more appropriate when bringing up the Spanish ties to stop referring to them as the oppressor when we actually are the descendants of these people…. We speak there language and have there culture…. We need to accept all aspects of our dna heritage and stop referring to they as them.
👏🏽👏🏽
The thing with Brazil is the people are not much the "colonized" ones, like you said both countries were forced to speak spanish and portuguese, but rather the brazilian people comes from the colonizers themselves. Like the root ancestry of brazilians are portuguese settlers and not much the indigenous people.
this is a very small minority, most people in brasil are descendants from a mix of African Portuguese and indigenous. only a minority mostly in North East rural are full decent Portuguese, otherwise they are usually decent from Italian German Japanese or Arab immigrants
@@digao726And even then, in Puerto Rico, most of the indigenous population died and very little survived, one quick google search and it says “by 1550 we’re near extinct” and 30 years prior it says there 1148 tainos left, a fair amount of whom would have been mixed with Europeans, not say to there culture didn’t survive, it partly did, just there genetics, not as much
@@CastIronBathTubyeah in Puerto Rico there are virtually no native taino speakers, whereas in brasil there are many first language speakers of Tupi-Guarani and other indigenous languages
@@digao726In Brazil there are many indigenous still thriving as in Paraguay, not so much in Puerto Rico though, do to the fact that it was easily colonizable and disease