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Portugal English

Meaning Portugal meaning

What does Portugal mean?
Definitions in simple English

Portugal

Portugal is a country near Spain in Europe.

Portugal

a republic in southwestern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula; Portuguese explorers and colonists in the 15th and 16th centuries created a vast overseas empire (including Brazil)

Synonyms Portugal synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as Portugal?

Examples Portugal examples

How do I use Portugal in a sentence?

Simple sentences

I am from Portugal.
Lisbon is the capital of Portugal.
By chance I met my ex-girlfriend in Portugal.
Our decision to go to Portugal was quite arbitrary.
My ex-boyfriend was brought up in Portugal.
Portugal is not an exception.
Portugal is no exception.
Portugal has decriminalized the personal possession of drugs.
I'm in Portugal.
Portugal is a country of emigration.
What was the first capital of Portugal?
The German national team dismantled Portugal.
Portugal has a very good team.
Portugal won the Euro.
He has been to Portugal, not to mention Spain.
She's the French ambassador to Portugal.
This relationship between Portugal and the United States is still maintained today.
Brazil was a colony of Portugal.
Do you live in Portugal or in Brazil?
He went to Portugal to work as a soccer trainer.

Movie subtitles

How very different it would be for the altogether more modest voyages about to be undertaken by a remarkable man from the tiny little European kingdom of Portugal.
Along with Portugal, Spain had been first off the mark, seizing the initiative in the New World.
Remember When He Spent Eight Hours Trying To Catch That Marlin Off Of Portugal?
NARRATOR: Within a few days, Dietrich was in Lisbon, Portugal. He went immediately to an address given to him by the FBI.
No, from Lisbon, Portugal.
She had the ceiling brought from Portugal.
Sir Rodney Leighton, Knight of the Bath, Knight of the Tower and Sword of Portugal. For some extraordinary reason, a rear admiral in His Majesty's Navy.
He was on Grazi's boat. three days out from Portugal.
In 1946 you were skipper of a private boat, bound from New York Harbor for Lisbon, Portugal.
Johnny Portugal.
That'll be you, Portugal.
They carry female prisoners from Sicily and Portugal to serve for the Sultan's pleasure.
She's in Portugal.
In Portugal?
It looks like a schooner from Spain or Portugal.
From Hamburg? -No, from Lisbon, Portugal.
Someday you're gonna go too far, Portugal.
I'm a cinch to be number two on Portugal's list when your place turns up empty.
Portugal's men are combing the city for Vincent.
You're part of the grab for Frankie's money, you're part of the murder that Portugal talked about tonight, even the manhunt for Vince, you're part of that, too.
Ask Portugal.
Portugal's got you cold.
Sir Rodney Leighton, Knight of the Bath, Knight of the Tower and Sword of Portugal.
If you're a captain on a boat borne for Portugal. and you keep your mouth shut. you can buy a lot of antiques.
And later, I have been sent fresh fruit and wine from Portugal.
Give me the plates for Portugal.
You will see Faust perform great trick s for the King of Portugal, from where he was chased for being the devil's accomplice and how, later, he cursed Portugal with floods from swollen seas.
His fame sweeps through the world as far as the King of Portugal.
You were then off the coast of Portugal?
This is a pistol from Portugal which doesn't have a match cord.
They're bringing women prisoners back as slaves from the coasts of Sicily and Portugal. to serve the Sultan's pleasure.
Portugal.
Portugal!
Maybe it wasn't Portugal?
EUROSEC European Space Exploration Complex Portugal, Gate 7.
Three days ago a cameraman from Portugal perished during a raid. His name was Poeblos Wasserman, and he was closely connected with Swedes.
I only evoked it in passing in my film, though I naturally attacked it with all the contempt it deserves - just as we have since attacked it in Portugal on a broader and more beautiful terrain.

News and current affairs

For Greece and Portugal, staying in the eurozone will be a tight squeeze.
And yet, competitiveness in Greece and Portugal, in particular, is not improving.
There have been just two ugly matches so far, full of fouls, nasty attacks, and unnecessary aggression, as well as numerous yellow and red cards: Italy vs. the US, and Portugal vs. the Netherlands.
For Italy, the path toward competitiveness is shorter, but for Portugal and Greece it is substantially longer - perhaps too long.
The eurozone's peripheral countries, including Greece, Portugal, Ireland, and Spain, found themselves pinned to the mast of the common currency, unable to gain competitiveness through exchange-rate depreciation.
NEW YORK - After the Greek and Irish crises and the spread of financial contagion to Portugal, Spain, and possibly even Italy, the eurozone is now in a serious crisis.
Finally, Europe needs policies that restore competitiveness and growth to the eurozone's periphery, where GDP is either still contracting (Greece, Spain, and Ireland) or barely growing (Italy and Portugal).
Spain, Austria, Italy, Denmark, Portugal are already ruled by center-right governments.
It simply means that when Great Britain installs a wind turbine, it becomes cheaper to burn coal in Portugal or Poland.
In practice, this has meant large flows of money either to big agricultural producers, like France, or to poorer member states, like Greece and Portugal.
When Spain and Portugal joined the EU two decades ago, emigration to existing member states was lessened by the fact that many immigrants had arrived from these countries during Europe's go-go 1960s.
The accession of Spain and Portugal was a vivid example of that in the 1980's, and it is an argument that should be considered with respect to such a populous country as Turkey.
In the eurozone, Ireland, Greece, Portugal, and Cyprus all had to restructure their sovereign debt to avoid outright default.
Risk premiums continue to fall across the board, and two countries - Ireland and Portugal - have already exited their adjustment programs.
The depth and gravity of the current economic and social crisis in countries like Greece, Portugal, and Spain present women with a new opportunity.
For countries with solvency problems, an adjustment program like those for Greece, Ireland, or Portugal would be appropriate.
The crisis-torn peripheral economies - Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Italy, and even Spain - are already in recession.
Senegalese firms seek to help their Spanish business partners, while Portugal extends an almost royal welcome to the leaders of their former colony, newly oil-rich Angola.
The deal was concluded on October 3, and has been interpreted as a successful market test for Portugal.
Official resources currently are sufficient to bail out Greece, Ireland, and Portugal, but not to prevent a self-fulfilling run on the short-term sovereign and financial liabilities of Spain and other potentially distressed eurozone members.
But even a larger envelope of official resources is not sufficient to stem the insolvency problems of Greece, Ireland, and, possibly, Portugal and Spain.
Countries like Greece, Italy, and arguably Portugal over-borrowed, and now their citizens face severe consequences.
This may seem an odd time to praise the EU, given the economic crises in Greece, Spain, Portugal, and Ireland.
In the more unsuccessful countries - Italy, Austria, Germany, France, Portugal, and the Netherlands - the proportion of immigrants with a tertiary education is below a quarter.
Spain, Greece, Portugal, and Ireland, in particular, allowed the low interest rates that accompanied the euro's introduction to fuel domestic booms.
Put differently: without the budget cuts, Britain would have been Spain - or perhaps even Portugal or Greece.
The public finances of Spain and Portugal are somewhat sounder, but those countries face huge problems in increasing their competitiveness within the eurozone.
Greece, Ireland, Portugal, and even Italy are often cited as countries that might benefit from being able to pursue an independent monetary policy and allow their currencies to adjust to more competitive levels.
But even the ECB cannot be indifferent to the risks of appreciation, because a strong euro may seriously complicate economic adjustment in countries like Spain, Portugal, Greece, and Ireland.
In Ireland, Spain, and even Portugal, exports grew strongly when the domestic economy collapsed and wages adjusted.
Several years ago, Greek exports of goods and services were equal to those of Portugal.

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