Gaúcho dialect
Gaúcho, more rarely called Sulriograndense, is the Brazilian Portuguese term for the characteristic accent spoken in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil's southernmost state, including its capital, Porto Alegre. It is heavily influenced by Spanish and somewhat influenced by Hunsrückisch, Venetian, Guarani and other native languages.
Phonology
Its phonology is heavily similar to Rioplatense Spanish, including its characteristics of the speaking syllabic rhythm, use of L-vocalization in the syllable coda, and little use of nasal vowels, basically restricted to the monophthong and the diphthongs.In the western and some central varieties there is the absence of vowel reduction with word-final and . In some other cities of the region, the nasal monophthong is heightened to, and in the metropolitan region final may be realised as.
The "hard" rhotic usually registers in western varieties as
The "soft" rhotic tends to register as either a short trill or