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Alguns

Alguns is a determiner and pronoun in Portuguese meaning “some” or “a few.” The masculine plural form is “alguns,” and the feminine plural form is “algumas.” The singular forms are “algum” (masculine) and “alguma” (feminine). It is used before a noun to indicate an unspecified portion of a larger group, or as a pronoun referring to an unspecified number of people or things.

Usage examples include: “Alguns estudantes chegaram cedo” (Some students arrived early) and “Conheci alguns na conferência”

Etymology and related forms: Algum/alguma/alguns/algumas derives from Latin aliquus/aliquum, passed into the Portuguese lexicon through old

Notes on usage: In Brazilian and European Portuguese, these forms are standard for indicating non-specific subsets

Overall, alguns functions as a flexible indefinite determiner and pronoun used to refer to a non-specific number

(I
met
some
at
the
conference).
The
phrase
can
also
appear
as
“algumas
pessoas”
(some
people)
or
“alguns
dias”
(a
few
days),
among
other
constructions.
linguistic
stages.
Related
forms
appear
in
other
Romance
languages,
such
as
Spanish
alguno/alguna
and
French
quelque,
reflecting
a
common
Indo-European
root
for
expressing
indefiniteness
and
quantity.
of
a
group.
“Alguns”
often
implies
a
portion
that
is
identifiable
in
context
but
not
precisely
enumerated,
whereas
other
indefinite
quantifiers
like
“uns”
or
“vários”
can
convey
different
nuances
of
number
or
informality.
The
feminine
forms
agree
with
the
noun
they
modify
or
replace.
of
people
or
things
within
a
larger
set.