My Tumblr Crushes:
Chuí - Rio Grande do Sul (by ricardo castro)
Caxias do Sul - Rio Grande do Sul (by Miriam Cardoso de Souza)
Pelotas - Rio Grande do Sul (by Eduardo Amorim)
Búzios - Rio de Janeiro (by Julio Celis)
Arraial do Cabo - Rio de Janeiro (by Julio Celis)
More Love, Please! (by macadeni)
The Romance languages (sometimes referred to as Romanic languages, Latin languages or Neo-Latin languages) are all the related languages derived from Vulgar Latin and forming a subgroup of the Italic languages within the Indo-European language family.
Today, there are more than 800 million native speakers worldwide, mainly in Europe and the Americas and many smaller regions scattered throughout the world, as well as large numbers of non-native speakers, and widespread use as lingua franca. Because of the extreme difficulty and varying methodology of distinguishing among language, variety, and dialect, it is impossible to count the number of Romance languages now in existence, but the standard count places the number of living Romance languages at almost 25. In fact, the number may be slightly larger, and many more existed previously (SIL Ethnologue lists 47 Romance languages).
In 2007 the five most widely spoken Romance languages by number of native speakers were Spanish (385 million), Portuguese (210 million), French (75 million), Italian (60 million), and Romanian (23 million). Many of these languages have large numbers of non-native speakers; this is especially the case for French, in widespread use throughout the Maghreb, Central and West Africa and Madagascar.
Mercado Central de Aracaju - Sergipe (by Ricardo Espinheira)
Performance da Oficina Cultural de Teatro de Oswald de Andrade, em São Paulo. (by Alécio Cezar)