European Portuguese and Russian are stress-timed languages and their rhythms sound similar. In fact, most Slavic languages are stress-timed and this is the main reason why European Portuguese sounds like a Slavic language. There are five other reasons that contribute to this similarity: sibilants, consonant assimilation, palatized consonants, the dark L, and nasal vowels and diphthongs. This doesn't apply to Brazilian Portuguese, which by comparison is weird..... It is too damn slow, too musical, too soft, too feminine ..... it is kind of sexy when a female is speaking it, but it sounds so sissy and fruity when it's a man speaking.
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Here is an example for today's lesson: listen closely to the audio of this video footage from Central Africa showing Portuguese paratroopers in heavy combat with african rebels in the area of Bambari in the Central African Republic earlier this month.
The combat footage was recorded during a major operation that included 50 hours of heavy combat firefights and led to the seizure of a rebel base in the area of Bambari.
The paratroopers of the Portuguese armed forces are currently operating under the United Nations' peacekeeping mission in the Central African Republic.
The battle began when African rebels of the UPC (Union for Peace in the Central African Republic) launched a violent attack on the town of Bambari, some 400 kilometres from the capital Bangui, in a bid to seize resources and extort the local population by collecting taxes.
The UPC is a former member of the Seleka rebel alliance, a coalition of mainly Muslim groups that seized power in the majority Christian country in 2013.
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