- published: 29 Jul 2010
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Gusttavo Lima e você is the third album of Brazilian sertanejo singer Gusttavo Lima and his second live album after the live album Inventor dos amores. The songs were recorded during a live concert on 3 June 2011 and in front of an audience of 60,000 during the festival "Festa Nacional do Milho" at the Exhibition Park of the Brazilian city Patos de Minas, Lima's hometown in Minas Gerais state, Brazil. The live materials were also released in DVD form.
The show lasted three hours during which Lima performed 29, out of which 23 were included in the album. Besides his known song, he sang 11 new songs never broadcast earlier.
The Portuguese personal pronouns and possessives display a higher degree of inflection than other parts of speech. Personal pronouns have distinct forms according to whether they stand for a subject (nominative), a direct object (accusative), an indirect object (dative), or a reflexive object. Several pronouns further have special forms used after prepositions.
The possessive pronouns are the same as the possessive adjectives, but each is inflected to express the grammatical person of the possessor and the grammatical gender of the possessed.
Pronoun use displays considerable variation with register and dialect, with particularly pronounced differences between the most colloquial varieties of European Portuguese and Brazilian Portuguese.
The personal pronouns of Portuguese have three basic forms: subject, object (object of a verb), and prepositional (object of a preposition).
1direct object (masculine and feminine) 2indirect object 3reflexive or reciprocal
Like most European languages, Portuguese has different words for "you", according to the degree of formality that the speaker wishes to show towards the addressee (T-V distinction). In very broad terms, tu, você (both meaning singular "you") and vocês (plural "you") are used in informal situations, while in formal contexts o senhor, a senhora, os senhores and as senhoras (masculine singular, feminine singular, masculine plural, and feminine plural "you", respectively) are preferred. However, there is considerable regional variation in the use of these terms, and more specific forms of address are sometimes employed.