SnowDevil’s Reviews > Practice Makes Perfect: Basic Portuguese > Status Update
SnowDevil
is on page 18 of 256
Unit 4 - Regular -ar verbs, present tense conjugations. Hobby-related vocabulary.
— Mar 04, 2025 10:26PM
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SnowDevil’s Previous Updates
SnowDevil
is on page 105 of 256
Possessives part 1 - basic object possession. Straightforward, similar to French, except:
1. In Portugal the article is used before the possessive pronoun
2. Mine/yours etc does NOT use the article - just the pronoun. In French this would be le mien/la mienne etc.
— May 05, 2025 08:40PM
1. In Portugal the article is used before the possessive pronoun
2. Mine/yours etc does NOT use the article - just the pronoun. In French this would be le mien/la mienne etc.
SnowDevil
is on page 100 of 256
Unit 21 - demonstratives. Unit 22 - nonchanging demonstratives (e.g. that thing/this thing that I don’t know a name for). In both cases there are different “that” words depending on location of the item. That thing over there, or that thing by the 3rd party in the convo.
— Apr 23, 2025 07:47PM
SnowDevil
is on page 86 of 256
Unit 19 - adjectives. Some new stuff in here beyond a/o endings - like the weirdness with ês endings to describe gender + number of nationality.
— Apr 19, 2025 12:58PM
SnowDevil
is on page 76 of 256
Unit 17 - indefinite articles and when not to use them. The book refrained from teaching “more advanced” exclusion rules… would have preferred having them mentioned here.
— Apr 16, 2025 12:00PM
SnowDevil
is on page 72 of 256
Unit 16 - definite articles and places they’re used. Dates, holidays, some cities, people’s names, and some countries are weird and inconsistent but I had mostly figured it out anyway. This unit should have been introduced much earlier IMO.
— Apr 12, 2025 10:08AM
SnowDevil
is on page 67 of 256
Unit 14 (I think) - saber vs conhecer. Mostly the same as French but a few specific phrases. “Saber” by heart, but “conhecer” by name/by sight.
— Apr 11, 2025 09:30PM
SnowDevil
is on page 62 of 256
Unit 14 - forming future tense using “ir” + infinitive. I’m now grammatically (and unintentionally) caught up with the Duo course.
— Apr 06, 2025 06:33PM

