Pronunciation, conversation, reading, and fundamentals of grammar. Specific attention to Portuguese as the language of Brazil. Native speakers of Portuguese must enroll in Port 321.
On-the-job experience evaluated by supervisor and posted on student’s transcript.
Second-year grammar, reading, writing, and conversation. Native speakers of Portuguese must take Port 321.
Fourth-semester class introducing grammar and culture through study of literature. Not for returned missionaries. Culmination of GE Mathematics/Foreign Language requirement. Native speakers of Portuguese must take Port 321.
Tools course to help students improve oral proficiency. Will not count for major or minor.
Introduction of culture, literature, and grammatical concerns through reading short stories, novels, and drama in Portuguese. First class for returned Portuguese-speaking missionaries. Fulfills GE Foreign Language requirement. Will count for minor but not for major. Native speakers should take Port 321.
Underlying concepts of Portuguese speech production and applications to pronunciation.
Introduction to linguistics of Portuguese: phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, history of the Portuguese language, philology, dialectology, sociolinguistics, and psycholinguistics.
Readings in modern literature; formal literary analysis.
Culture, history, art, music, and traditions of Portugal.
Culture, history, art, music, and traditions of Brazil.
Contemporary Portuguese or Brazilian culture: the people and their customs and institutions.
On-the-job experience.
Theory and practice of dramatic performance. Includes participation in play to be performed during semester. Note: No more than 3 hours of 439R credit may count toward any degree.
Literary periods, genres, and great writers of Portugal.
Specific topics in Portuguese (Peninsular) literature. Course content will vary each semester to offer optimum exposure to all areas of Portuguese literature.
Literary periods, genres, and great writers of Brazil.
Specific topics in Portuguese (Brazilian) literature. Course content will vary each semester to offer optimum exposure to all areas of Brazilian literature.
Modern authors from the five African nations whose official language is Portuguese: Angola, Cabo Verde, Guiné Bissau, Mozambique, and the two-island republic São Tomé and Príncipe. Authors include José Craveirinha, Mia Couto, Noémia de Sousa, José Tenreiro, Castro Soromenho, Luandino Vieira, Pepetala, and Baltasar Lopes, among others.
Authors from the eight nations whose official language is Portuguese, plus former colonies and present regions of important Portuguese influence. These include Luso-American and Azorean writers, as well as authors from East Timor (formerly Indonesia), Goa (India), and Macau (China).
Under faculty member's direction, designing and conducting research project covering material not normally presented in regular course work. Research paper required. Total Port 480R credit toward bachelor's degree not to exceed 3 hours.
Bibliography, research, and writing of senior thesis. Recommended for students planning graduate studies in Portuguese.
Tool course to meet oral proficiency requirement for all majors. No major or minor credit.
Applying contemporary grammatical concepts to problems in Portuguese grammar.
Comparative study of evolution of Latin into modern romance languages.
Linguistic sources that contributed to formation of Portuguese.
Topics from semantics to dialectology to sociolinguistics.