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faladas

Faladas is a term that arises from Portuguese grammar as the feminine plural past participle of the verb falar, meaning spoken or uttered. In standard usage, faladas functions as an adjective or as part of a passive construction to describe feminine plural nouns.

In practice, faladas appears in phrases such as as palavras faladas (the spoken words) or histórias faladas

Beyond its grammatical role, faladas may occur in titles or phrases, particularly in contexts dealing with

Notability and usage notes: As a morphological form, faladas is a routine part of Portuguese verb conjugation

(spoken
narratives).
Because
it
is
gender-
and
number-specific,
the
form
must
agree
with
the
noun
it
modifies:
faladas
for
feminine
plural
nouns,
falado
or
falados
for
masculine
or
mixed
gender
nouns.
oral
tradition,
speech,
or
dialogue.
It
is
not
itself
a
separate
concept
or
widely
recognized
subject
in
English-language
reference
works;
rather,
it
is
a
linguistic
inflection
used
to
express
that
the
words
or
speech
in
question
are
feminine
and
plural.
and
agreement.
It
does
not
denote
a
distinct
entity,
organization,
place,
or
widely
published
work
on
its
own.
When
encountered
in
text,
it
signals
agreement
with
a
feminine
plural
noun
and
indicates
that
the
described
speech
or
utterance
is
being
referred
to
in
a
feminine
plural
sense.