European Portuguese | |
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Portuguese of Portugal Iberian Portuguese Peninsular Portuguese | |
Português europeu | |
Native to | Portugal |
Native speakers | 10 million (2012) |
Language family | Indo-European |
Dialects | |
Writing system | |
Official status | |
Official language in | Portugal |
Regulated by | Academia das Ciências de Lisboa |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Glottolog | gali1257 |
IETF | pt-PT |
Dialectical continuum of Iberian Romance languages including European Portuguese and its dialects. |
European Portuguese (Portuguese: português europeu, pronounced [puɾtuˈɣez ewɾuˈpew]), also known as Portuguese of Portugal (Portuguese: português de Portugal), Iberian Portuguese (Portuguese: português ibérico), and Peninsular Portuguese (Portuguese: português peninsular), refers to the dialects of the Portuguese language spoken in Portugal, Angola, Mozambique, São Tomé and Príncipe, Cape Verde, and Guinea-Bissau. The word "European" was chosen to avoid the clash of "Portuguese Portuguese" ("português português") as opposed to Brazilian Portuguese.
Portuguese is a pluricentric language; it is the same language with several interacting codified standard forms in many countries. Portuguese is a Romance language with Celtic, Germanic, Greek, and Arabic influence. It was spoken in the Iberian Peninsula before as Galician-Portuguese. With the formation of Portugal as a country in the 12th century, the language evolved into Portuguese. In the Spanish province of Galicia to the north of Portugal, the native language is Galician. Both Portuguese and Galician are very similar and natives can understand each other as they share the same recent common ancestor. Portuguese and Spanish are different languages, although they share 89% of their lexicon.
Phonology
Further information: Portuguese phonologyThis section needs expansion with: details of the consonants. You can help by adding to it. (December 2020) |
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Vowel classification
Portuguese uses vowel height to contrast stressed syllables with unstressed syllables; the vowels /a ɛ e ɔ o/ tend to be raised to when they are unstressed (see below for details). The dialects of Portugal are characterized by reducing vowels to a greater extent than others. Falling diphthongs are composed of a vowel followed by one of the high vowels /i/ or /u/; although rising diphthongs occur in the language as well, they can be interpreted as hiatuses.
European Portuguese possesses quite a wide range of vowel allophones:
- All vowels are lowered and retracted before /l/.
- All vowels are raised and advanced before alveolar, palato-alveolar and palatal consonants.
- Word-finally, /ɨ/ as well as unstressed /u/ and /ɐ/ are voiceless .
The realization of /ɐ/ in this contrast occurs in a limited morphological context, namely in verbal conjugation between the first person plural present and past perfect indicative forms of verbs such as pensamos ('we think') and pensámos ('we thought'). proposes that it is a kind of crasis rather than phonemic distinction of /a/ and /ɐ/. It means that in falamos 'we speak' there is the expected prenasal /a/-raising: , while in falámos 'we spoke' there are phonologically two /a/ in crasis: /faˈlaamos/ > . Close-mid vowels and open-mid vowels (/e ~ ɛ/ and /o ~ ɔ/) contrast only when they are stressed. In unstressed syllables, they occur in complementary distribution.
According to Mateus and d'Andrade (2000:19), in European Portuguese, the stressed only occurs in the following three contexts:
- Before a palatal consonant (such as telha )
- Before the palatal front glide (such as lei )
- Before a nasal consonant (such as cama )
In Greater Lisbon (according to NUTS III, which does not include Setúbal) /e/ can be centralized before palatal sounds (/j, ɲ, ʃ, ʒ, ʎ/); e.g. roupeiro , brenha , texto , vejo , coelho .
European Portuguese "e caduc"
European Portuguese possesses a near-close near-back unrounded vowel. It occurs in unstressed syllables such as in pegar ('to grip'). There is no standard symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet for this sound. The IPA Handbook transcribes it as /ɯ/, but in Portuguese studies /ɨ/ is traditionally used.
- Traditionally, it is pronounced when "e" is unstressed; e.g. verdade , perigo .
- However, if "e" is initial, then it is pronounced ; e.g. energia , exemplo .
- When "e" is adjacent to another vowel, it becomes ; e.g. real .
- However, notice that when the e caduc is preceded by a semi-vowel, it may become poesia , quietude .
- For the most part, unstressed "i" is not lowered to /ɨ/. However, when it is adjacent to a palatal consonant, , or to in the preceding/following syllable, it usually does become /ɨ/. E.g. ministro , príncipe , artilhar , caminhar , pistola , pijama .
- The Portuguese e caduc may be elided, becoming in some instances a syllabic consonant; e.g. verdade , perigo , energia, , ministro , príncipe , artilhar , caminhar , pistola .
There are very few minimal pairs for this sound: some examples include pregar ('to nail') vs. pregar ('to preach'; the latter stemming from earlier preegar < Latin praedicāre), sê ('be!') vs. sé ('see/cathedral') vs. se ('if'), and pêlo ('hair') vs. pélo ('I peel off') vs. pelo ('for the'), after orthographic changes, all these three words are now spelled pelo.
Geographic variation
European Portuguese is divided into Northern and Southern varieties. The prestige norms are based on two varieties: that of Coimbra and that of Lisbon.
Phonetically, differences emerge within Continental Portuguese. For example, in northern Portugal, the phonemes /b/ and /v/ are less differentiated than in the rest of the Portuguese speaking world (similar to the other languages of the Iberian peninsula). Also, the original alveolar trill /r/ remains common in many northern dialects (especially in rural areas), like Transmontano, Portuense, Minhoto, and much of Beirão. Another regionalism can be found in the south and the islands with the use of the gerund in the present progressive tense rather than the infinitive.
Portuguese is spoken by a significant minority in Andorra and Luxembourg. There are also immigrant communities in France and Germany.
Galician
The Galician language, spoken in the Autonomous Community of Galicia in Spain, is very closely related to Portuguese. There is, as yet, no consensus among writers and linguists on whether Galician and Portuguese are still the same language (in fact they were for many centuries, Galician-Portuguese having developed in the region of the former Roman province of Gallaecia, from the Vulgar Latin that had been introduced by Roman soldiers, colonists and magistrates during the time of the Roman Empire) or distinct yet closely related languages.
Galicia has expressed interest in joining the CPLP as an associate observer pending permission from the Spanish government.
Prominence
The Instituto Camões is a Portuguese international institution dedicated to the worldwide promotion of the Portuguese language, Portuguese culture, and international aid, on behalf of the Government of Portugal.
RTP is the Portuguese public television network and also serves as a vehicle for European-Portuguese-providing media content throughout the world. There is a branch of RTP Internacional named RTP África, which serves Lusophone Africa.
In estimating the size of the speech community for European Portuguese, one must take into account the consequences of the Portuguese diaspora: immigrant communities located throughout the world in the Americas, Australia, Europe and Africa.
See also
- Portuguese language
- Acordo Ortográfico da Língua Portuguesa de 1990
- Macanese Portuguese
- Indian Portuguese
- Malaccan Creole Portuguese
- Galician Portuguese
- Cape Verdean Portuguese
References
- Portuguese at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
- Extra, Guus; Yaǧmur, Kutlay (2004). Urban Multilingualism in Europe: Immigrant Minority Languages at Home and School. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters. ISBN 9781853597787.
- ^ Cruz-Ferreira (1995:92)
- Silveira, Regina Célia Pagliuchi da (2004). "A questão da identidade idiomática: A pronúncia das vogais tônicas e pretônicas na variedade padrão do português brasileiro". Signum: Estudos da Linguagem (in Portuguese). 7 (1): 165–179. doi:10.5433/2237-4876.2004v7n1p165.
- Spahr (2013:6)
- Major (1992:7)
- Mateus, Maria Helena; d'Andrade, Ernesto (2000). The Phonology of Portuguese. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 19.
- "Aprender Português Europeu - Guia de Pronúncia das Vogais" [Learn European Portuguese - Vowel Pronunciation Guide]. european-portuguese.info (in Portuguese).
- Harris, Martin; Vincent, Nigel (1988). The Romance Languages. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Mateus, Maria Helena Mira; Brito, Ana Maria; Duarte, Inês; Faria, Isabel Hub (2003). Gramática da Língua Portuguesa [Portuguese Grammar]. colecção universitária, Linguística (in Portuguese) (7 ed.). Lisbon: Caminho. p. 995. ISBN 972-21-0445-4.
- Baxter, A. N. (1992). "Portuguese as a Pluricentric Language". In Clyne, Michael (ed.). Pluricentric Languages: Differing Norms in Different Nations. Berlin: De Gruyter. p. 14. ISBN 3-11-012855-1.
Works cited
- Cruz-Ferreira, Madalena (1995). "European Portuguese". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 25 (2): 90–94. doi:10.1017/S0025100300005223. S2CID 249414876.
- Major, Roy C. (1992), "Stress and Rhythm in Brazilian Portuguese", in Koike, Dale April; Macedo, Donaldo P (eds.), Romance Linguistics: The Portuguese Context, Westport, CT: Bergin & Garvey, ISBN 0-89789-297-6
- Spahr, Christopher (2013). "Confronting the European Portuguese Low Vowel Distinction" (PDF).
External links
- Description of the pronunciation rules of European Portuguese Archived 2013-11-04 at the Wayback Machine
- Description of the pronunciation rules of Brazilian Portuguese
- Tables with the pronunciation of each vowel and consonant letter in European Portuguese
- Article on variation in European Portuguese
- On gerund clauses of Portuguese dialects
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