16:2416:24, 19 December 2012diffhist+4
Extremism
I'm against using parenthesis after period. Not doing so is not regarded as wrong by anybody (it is even the recommended standard for Portuguese and Spanish), but despite widespread in English usage, it may go against minoritarian rules of punctuation.
14:5414:54, 19 December 2012diffhist+38
Katakana
The most common vowel realizations of ン, nasalized u and i, aren't found in French, though they are recurrent phonemes in Portuguese,
14:3414:34, 19 December 2012diffhist+168
Uruguayan Portuguese
It perfectly behaves as a Brazilian dialect according to sources, so I'm going to group it as a subdialect within gaúcho, within vernarcular Brazilian.
14:1614:16, 19 December 2012diffhist−103
Amapá
The complementary distribution of [a] and [ɐ] isn't that different between the two main variants of Portuguese. Two transcriptions are not necessary.
19:0819:08, 10 November 2012diffhist+119
White Latin Americans
Maybe in the USA, but she's your average white person in South America. AFAI can see, there's about 30-40% of European descent descent between where white starts and mestizo/ço ends. Panama is certainly not like the Southern Cone, BTW.
15:3715:37, 4 October 2012diffhist−22
Coronelism
At that time, Rio de Janeiro's Portuguese, which uses alveolo-palatal coda sibilant and mid unstressed e/o, was the sole standard.
16:2416:24, 19 December 2012diffhist+4
Extremism
I'm against using parenthesis after period. Not doing so is not regarded as wrong by anybody (it is even the recommended standard for Portuguese and Spanish), but despite widespread in English usage, it may go against minoritarian rules of punctuation.
14:5414:54, 19 December 2012diffhist+38
Katakana
The most common vowel realizations of ン, nasalized u and i, aren't found in French, though they are recurrent phonemes in Portuguese,
14:3414:34, 19 December 2012diffhist+168
Uruguayan Portuguese
It perfectly behaves as a Brazilian dialect according to sources, so I'm going to group it as a subdialect within gaúcho, within vernarcular Brazilian.
14:1614:16, 19 December 2012diffhist−103
Amapá
The complementary distribution of [a] and [ɐ] isn't that different between the two main variants of Portuguese. Two transcriptions are not necessary.
19:0819:08, 10 November 2012diffhist+119
White Latin Americans
Maybe in the USA, but she's your average white person in South America. AFAI can see, there's about 30-40% of European descent descent between where white starts and mestizo/ço ends. Panama is certainly not like the Southern Cone, BTW.
15:3715:37, 4 October 2012diffhist−22
Coronelism
At that time, Rio de Janeiro's Portuguese, which uses alveolo-palatal coda sibilant and mid unstressed e/o, was the sole standard.