No café da manhã, ela não usa nem xícara nem copo grande; prefere beber água da garrafa.

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Questions & Answers about No café da manhã, ela não usa nem xícara nem copo grande; prefere beber água da garrafa.

What does no mean in No café da manhã?

No is a contraction of em + o, so it literally means in the.

  • em ono
  • No café da manhã = At breakfast / During breakfast

Portuguese uses these contractions very often:

  • em + a = na
  • em + os = nos
  • em + as = nas
  • de + a = da
  • de + o = do

So no café da manhã is the natural way to say at breakfast.

Why does café da manhã mean breakfast?

It is an idiomatic expression in Portuguese. Literally, café da manhã means something like morning coffee, but the full expression is the normal Brazilian Portuguese word for breakfast.

Breakdown:

  • café = coffee
  • da manhã = of the morning / in the morning

Even though it contains the word coffee, it does not refer only to the drink. It means the whole meal: breakfast.

Why is it não usa nem xícara nem copo grande? How does nem... nem... work?

Nem... nem... means neither... nor....

In this sentence:

  • ela não usa nem xícara nem copo grande
  • literally: she does not use neither cup nor large glass
  • natural English: she uses neither a cup nor a large glass

In Portuguese, it is very common to use:

  • não + verb + nem + item + nem + item

Examples:

  • Não gosto nem de café nem de chá. = I like neither coffee nor tea.
  • Ela não quer nem sair nem ficar em casa. = She wants neither to go out nor stay home.

So the structure is completely normal.

Could the sentence say only nem xícara nem copo grande without não?

Sometimes nem... nem... can appear without não, but with a verb like this, não... nem... nem... is very common and natural.

Compare:

  • Ela não usa nem xícara nem copo grande. = very natural
  • Ela usa nem xícara nem copo grande. = not natural here

So for learners, the safest pattern is:

  • não + verb + nem + X + nem + Y
What is the difference between xícara and copo?

They are different kinds of drinking containers.

  • xícara = cup, usually with a handle, often for coffee or tea
  • copo = glass or drinking cup, usually without a handle

So:

  • xícara suggests something like a coffee cup
  • copo grande suggests a large drinking glass

This distinction is important in Portuguese, just as it is in English.

Why is it copo grande and not grande copo?

In Portuguese, adjectives often come after the noun.

So:

  • copo grande = large glass
  • garrafa pequena = small bottle
  • casa bonita = beautiful house

You can sometimes put the adjective before the noun, but that often changes the tone or emphasis, and in many everyday cases it sounds less neutral.

For a basic learner rule, use:

  • noun + adjective

So copo grande is the normal choice.

Why is there no article before xícara or copo grande?

Portuguese often omits the indefinite article in structures like this, especially when talking about categories or types of objects.

So:

  • não usa nem xícara nem copo grande

is natural and means she does not use either kind of container.

You could sometimes hear:

  • nem uma xícara nem um copo grande

but that would sound more explicitly like not even one cup nor one large glass or would put more focus on the countable objects themselves.

The version in the sentence is smooth and natural.

Why is it prefere beber and not something like prefere a beber?

Because preferir is normally followed directly by a noun or an infinitive.

So:

  • prefere beber água = she prefers to drink water
  • prefere café = she prefers coffee

You do not normally add a preposition before the infinitive after preferir.

This is different from some other Portuguese verbs that do require a preposition.

Why does the sentence use beber água without a before água?

Because água is being used as a general mass noun here: to drink water.

This is very similar to English, where we also usually say drink water, not drink a water.

So:

  • beber água = drink water
  • comprar leite = buy milk
  • comer pão = eat bread

If you add an article, the meaning becomes more specific:

  • beber a água = drink the water

That would usually refer to a specific water already identified in context.

Why is it da garrafa? Does that mean of the bottle or from the bottle?

Here da garrafa means from the bottle in natural English.

Grammatically, da is de + a:

  • de = of / from
  • a = the
  • da = of the / from the

In this sentence:

  • beber água da garrafa

means she prefers to drink the water from the bottle, not from a cup or a glass.

Portuguese often uses de where English would use from.

Why not say na garrafa instead of da garrafa?

Because na garrafa means in the bottle, while da garrafa means from the bottle.

Compare:

  • A água está na garrafa. = The water is in the bottle.
  • Ela bebe água da garrafa. = She drinks water from the bottle.

So:

  • na garrafa describes location
  • da garrafa describes source
Why is ela included? Can Portuguese drop the subject pronoun?

Yes, Portuguese can often drop the subject pronoun, because the verb ending often shows who the subject is.

So this could also be:

  • No café da manhã, não usa nem xícara nem copo grande; prefere beber água da garrafa.

However, including ela can help with clarity, contrast, or emphasis. It is perfectly natural to include it.

Brazilian Portuguese uses subject pronouns more often than some learners expect, so ela here does not sound strange.

Is usar natural here? Can you really use a cup or glass in Portuguese?

Yes, usar is natural.

  • usar uma xícara
  • usar um copo
  • usar talheres

It means to use in a broad sense, just like in English.

Depending on context, Portuguese speakers might also use other expressions, but usar is completely understandable and natural in this sentence.

What does the semicolon do in this sentence?

The semicolon separates two closely related parts:

  • ela não usa nem xícara nem copo grande
  • prefere beber água da garrafa

It shows a strong connection between the two ideas:

  1. what she does not use
  2. what she prefers instead

You could also write this with a period, and in some cases a comma might appear in informal writing, but the semicolon is a neat way to connect the two clauses.

Why is No café da manhã placed at the beginning?

This puts the time expression first and sets the scene: At breakfast...

Portuguese is flexible with word order, so you could also say:

  • Ela não usa nem xícara nem copo grande no café da manhã; prefere beber água da garrafa.

But putting No café da manhã first is very natural when the speaker wants to establish the context right away.

How are some of the tricky words pronounced?

A few words here may be hard for English speakers:

  • não: the ão is a nasal sound, roughly like now with nasalization
  • manhã: the final ã is also nasal
  • xícara: in Brazilian Portuguese, the x here sounds like sh, so roughly SHEE-ka-ra
  • água: roughly AH-gwa
  • garrafa: roughly ga-HA-fa in many Brazilian accents, because the r can sound like an English h

The exact pronunciation varies by region, but those approximations are helpful for beginners.

Why are there accent marks in manhã, xícara, and água?

Accent marks in Portuguese help show stress and sometimes vowel quality.

In this sentence:

  • manhã: the tilde (ã) shows nasalization
  • xícara: the acute accent marks the stressed syllable
  • água: the acute accent also helps show stress

These accents are part of the correct spelling and should be written.

Could copo grande mean big cup instead of large glass?

Not usually, because copo is not the normal word for a cup with a handle. It refers to a glass or drinking cup/tumbler.

So:

  • xícara = cup
  • copo = glass / tumbler

Therefore copo grande is best understood as large glass or big drinking glass, not big cup.