Portuguese Phrasebook · Abschnitt 2/7

Greetings & Politeness

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PraktischGreetings & Politeness

Greetings & Politeness

Politeness is highly valued in Portugal. People greet when entering a shop, thank profusely, and often use "se faz favor" (please). Here are the most important expressions.

Greeting

PortuguesePronunciationEnglish
Bom diabong DI-aGood morning (until about 12 PM)
Boa tardeboa TARDGood afternoon (12–6 PM)
Boa noiteboa NOITGood evening / Good night
Oláo-LAHello (informal)
Adeusa-DEUSCHGoodbye
Até logoa-TE LO-guSee you soon
TchautschauBye (informal, from Italian)

Politeness

PortuguesePronunciationEnglish
Obrigado/aobri-GA-du/aThank you (man/woman)
De nadadö NA-daYou're welcome (response to thank you)
Se faz favor / Por favorsö fasch fa-WORPlease (request)
Com licençakong li-SSÄN-ssaExcuse me (when passing through)
Desculpedösch-KULPSorry (general)
Sim / Nãossing / naungYes / No
Fala inglês?FA-la in-GLESCHDo you speak English?
Não falo portuguêsnaung FA-lu portu-GESCHI don't speak Portuguese
Não entendonaung en-TEN-duI don't understand

Addressing

Portuguese people often use “Senhor" / “Senhora" (Mr. / Mrs.) as a polite form of address — even without last names. In a restaurant: “Senhor, a conta, se faz favor" (Sir [waiter], the bill, please). The informal form (tu) is used only among friends and young people. The formal address is the 3rd person singular (ele/ela — thus “Fala" instead of “Falas").

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