- jeca-tatu
- jeca-tatu adj. s. m. Nome e símbolo do Caboclo do interior do Brasil.
Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa . 2012.
Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa . 2012.
Caipira — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Figura típica de un caipira del siglo XIX, pintura de Almeida Júnior El término caipira, que en tupí significa cortador de mato, es el nombre que los indígenas del interior del Estado de São Paulo le dieron a los hom … Wikipedia Español
Monteiro Lobato, José Bento — ▪ Brazilian writer born April 18, 1882, Taubaté, Braz. died July 4, 1948, São Paulo writer and publisher, forerunner of the Modernist movement in Brazilian literature. Originally a lawyer and coffee planter in the interior of São… … Universalium
Mauro Alice — (1925, Curitiba, Paraná, Brazil 23 November 2010, São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil) was a film editor. Alice has been working in the Brazilian cinema since 1952 and has edited nearly 60 films, including Kiss of the Spider Woman (1985), Corazón… … Wikipedia
Monteiro Lobato — This article is about the Brazilian writer. For the place in São Paulo, Brazil, named after him, see Monteiro Lobato, São Paulo. José Bento Renato Monteiro Lobato Lobato around 1920 at Cia. Editora Nacional Born April 18, 1882 … Wikipedia
Caboclo — Statue de Múrilo Sá Toledo représentant la naissance d un Caboclo Caboclo ou caboco est, au Brésil, le nom par lequel on désigne les métis descendant d Européens blancs et d Amérindiens. Ils forment de nos jours la population la plus importante… … Wikipédia en Français
Brazilian literature — Introduction the body of written works produced in the Portuguese language in Brazil. Colonial period Brazil was claimed for Portugal in 1500 and was named for the land s first export product, pau brasil (brazilwood), trade in which… … Universalium
BRÉSIL - La littérature — Les historiens de la littérature brésilienne considèrent qu’elle commence au XVIe siècle. Toutefois, ce point de vue n’est soutenable que si l’on confond l’histoire littéraire du Brésil – ou l’histoire de l’activité littéraire au Brésil – et… … Encyclopédie Universelle