Esquire Theme by Matthew Buchanan
Social icons by Tim van Damme

13

Mar

BRAZILIAN PORTUGUESE IS THE BEST LANGUAGE

If you want a decent return on your investment, says Helen Joyce, the best language to learn is Brazilian Portuguese…

Some lunatics learn languages for fun. The rest of us are looking for a decent return on our investment. That means choosing a language with plenty of native speakers. One spoken by people worth talking to, in a place worth visiting. One with close relatives, so you have a head start with your third language. One not so distant from English that you give up.

There really is only one rational choice: Brazilian Portuguese. Brazil is big (190m residents; half a continent). Its economic prospects are bright. São Paulo is Latin America’s business capital. No other country has flora and fauna more varied and beautiful. It is home to the world’s largest standing forest, the Amazon. The weather is great and so are the beaches. The people are friendly, and shameless white liars. You’ll be told “Your Portuguese is wonderful!” many times before it is true.

You won’t need a new alphabet or much new grammar, though you may find the language addicted to declensions and unduly fond of the subjunctive. You’ll learn hundreds of words without effort (azul means blue, verde means green) and be able to guess entire sentences (O sistema bancário é muito forte: the banking system is very strong). With new pronunciation and a few new words you’ll get around in Portugal and parts of Africa. If you speak Spanish, French or Italian, you’ll find half the work is already done — and if not, why not try? With Portuguese under your belt you’ll fly along.

Best of all, you’ll stand out. Only about 10m Brazilians have reasonable English, and far more Anglophones speak French or Spanish than Portuguese, of any flavour. I did not choose this language; it was thrust on me by the offer of a job in São Paulo. But when I think of my sons, now ten and five, one day being able to write “fluent Brazilian Portuguese” on their CVs, I feel a little smug.

Helen Joyce is The Economist’s São Paulo correspondent

IDEAS HELEN JOYCE MARCH/APRIL 2012 THE BIG QUESTION

Subscribe to Intelligent Life and get powerful writing, provocative opinions and memorable photography delivered to your door every two months

22

Feb

thedailywhat:

Photo Series of the Day: Mommy photographer Rachel Hulin made her baby boy Henry the subject of a chest-clutching series of photos entitled, simply, The Flying Series.

“I wanted the flights to feel genuine,” Hulin told Time’s LightBox. “These are places we are really in everyday, it’s not a cut-and-paste job on random interiors and landscapes.”

Though she won’t say how she made little Henry fly, Hulin insists she never throws him. PetaPixel suggests that she may be employing a technique similar to the one used by Pat David in his bouncing baby photo.

[mmm / petapixel.]

Beta, vamos ver se o Fernando supera essas!!! Ahahah

14

Feb

Ahahah at least its honest.. Ahahaha

Ahahah at least its honest.. Ahahaha

09

Feb

Ready to go back to school???

Ready to go back to school???

(Source: sarahjennifferjayne)

08

Feb

(Source: dashboarddinosaur)

23

Jan

In Jimmy’s honor… as he’ll have a tough day tomorrow! Poor thing! ehehehe

(Source: pleatedjeans)

18

Jan

rhymemeariver:

I thought it was punny. 

rhymemeariver:

I thought it was punny. 

17

Jan

Eheheh! Owesome!

Eheheh! Owesome!

(Source: sardosycserokyric)

And IIII would walk 500 miles and IIII would ealk 500 more…

(Source: fuckyeahhowimetyourmother)

21

May

Loved it, Mi! ahahahahahahah - It really is FA KIN SU PA! :)

Loved it, Mi! ahahahahahahah - It really is FA KIN SU PA! :)