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Vocêtu

Vocêtu is a sociolinguistic term used to describe the coexistence and mixing of the two second-person pronouns in Brazilian Portuguese: você and tu, together with their verb conjugations. In practice, speakers may switch between forms within a conversation or even a sentence to signal regional identity, informality, or social stance. The term is descriptive rather than prescriptive.

Geographically, vocêtu has been documented in several regional varieties of Brazil, particularly in rural communities and

Linguistically, você and tu correspond to different verb conjugations: você uses the third-person singular, while tu

in
urban
centers
that
preserve
traditional
speech
patterns.
The
extent
and
rules
of
use
vary
by
speaker,
age,
socioeconomic
group,
and
context.
In
many
urban
settings,
você
is
the
prevailing
form,
while
tu
remains
common
in
specific
communities
or
among
older
speakers;
the
interaction
between
the
two
systems
is
a
focus
of
sociolinguistic
study
as
a
marker
of
language
contact
and
regional
identity.
uses
the
second-person
singular.
The
mixing
of
forms
can
appear
at
the
pronoun
level
and
can
influence
verbal
agreement
in
predictable
ways.
Researchers
describe
patterns
such
as
co-occurrence
of
você
and
tu
within
the
same
discourse,
shifts
in
formality,
and
the
resilience
of
regional
varieties
amid
standardization
pressures.
The
phenomenon
illustrates
broader
questions
about
linguistic
variation,
change,
and
the
coexistence
of
multiple
pronoun
paradigms
in
a
single
language.