A2 noun #2,000 most common 4 min read

bebé

A bebé is a very young child or infant.

Explanation at your level:

A bebé is a very young child. You use this word when you see a tiny human. For example, if you see a mother with a small child in a carriage, you can say, "Que bebé bonito!" (What a beautiful baby!). It is a very simple and useful word for beginners.

At this level, you can use bebé to talk about family members or daily life. You might say, "O bebé precisa de leite" (The baby needs milk) or "Eu gosto de brincar com o meu bebé." It is a common noun that you will use when talking about growth and family routines.

As you reach the intermediate level, you can use bebé in more complex sentences. You might discuss the responsibilities of parenting, such as "Cuidar de um bebé exige muita paciência e dedicação." You can also use it in comparisons or to describe developmental stages in a more descriptive way.

At the B2 level, you can use bebé to discuss societal or cultural topics. You might talk about "taxas de natalidade" (birth rates) or the challenges of "criação de bebés" in modern cities. You can also use it figuratively, such as referring to a new project as your "bebé" (your pet project).

In advanced contexts, bebé can be used to discuss biological development or psychological bonding. You might analyze the "apego do bebé" (infant attachment) or discuss historical perspectives on childcare. At this level, you should be comfortable using the word in both literal, scientific, and metaphorical contexts with nuance.

At the C2 level, you have mastered the word bebé to the point where you can use it in literary or philosophical discussions about the human condition. You might explore the vulnerability of the "bebé" as a metaphor for innocence or potential. You understand the subtle register differences and can use it in academic writing with precision and stylistic awareness.

Word in 30 Seconds

  • Bebé means infant.
  • It is a masculine noun.
  • The plural is bebés.
  • Used in daily life and family contexts.

When you talk about a bebé, you are referring to the smallest members of our human family. It is a word that carries a lot of warmth and affection, describing a child in their very first months of life.

In European Portuguese, bebé is the standard term for an infant. You will use this word constantly when discussing family, growth, or the daily routines of caring for a newborn. It is a universal word that captures that special, fragile time before a child learns to walk or talk properly.

Think of it as the starting point of the human journey. Whether you are talking about a newborn, a crawling infant, or simply referring to a young child in a park, bebé is the perfect, clear noun to use.

The word bebé has a fascinating history rooted in the way humans mimic the sounds of early childhood. It is essentially an onomatopoeic term, meaning it was formed by the sounds that babies themselves make, specifically the 'ba-ba' or 'be-be' sounds often heard in early babbling.

It shares a common ancestor with the French bébé and is related to the English word baby. Over centuries, these variations spread across Europe, evolving from simple nursery sounds into the formal nouns we use today. It is a beautiful example of how language reflects our natural, biological connection to our offspring.

Historically, the term has remained remarkably stable because the concept of an infant is universal across all cultures. While spelling has shifted slightly between languages, the core pronunciation remains tied to those first, sweet sounds of life.

Using bebé is very straightforward because it functions just like the English word 'baby'. You will often hear it paired with verbs like nascer (to be born) or cuidar (to take care of).

In a casual setting, you might say "O bebé está a dormir" (The baby is sleeping). In more formal contexts, such as a doctor's office, it is still the preferred term. It is a neutral, everyday word that fits into almost any conversation about family life.

Common collocations include bebé recém-nascido (newborn baby) or roupa de bebé (baby clothes). Because it is a noun, it always takes an article, such as o bebé (the baby) or um bebé (a baby), depending on whether you are talking about a specific child or just any infant in general.

While bebé is a simple noun, it appears in several idiomatic expressions reflecting its role in our lives.

  • "Ter um bebé": To give birth. Example: "Ela vai ter um bebé em breve."
  • "Cara de bebé": Used to describe someone with a very young, smooth face. Example: "Ele tem cara de bebé, mas já tem vinte anos."
  • "Passos de bebé": Small, incremental progress. Example: "Estamos a fazer progressos, mas são passos de bebé."
  • "O bebé da casa": The youngest person in a family or group. Example: "Apesar de ter dez anos, ele continua a ser o bebé da casa."
  • "Dormir como um bebé": To sleep very soundly and peacefully. Example: "Depois da caminhada, dormi como um bebé."

Grammatically, bebé is a masculine noun, so we use the article o or um. The plural form is bebés, where you simply add an 's' to the end.

Pronunciation is quite rhythmic. The stress falls on the second syllable: be-BÉ. It is a sharp, clear sound that is easy for learners to master. Unlike some English words with silent letters, every letter in bebé is pronounced clearly.

Rhyming words in Portuguese include café, , and até, all of which share that final accented 'é' sound. Practice saying it slowly: be (like the 'be' in 'bed') and (like the 'e' in 'get'). Once you hit that final syllable with a bit of energy, you have mastered the pronunciation!

Fun Fact

The word is almost universal across Romance languages.

Pronunciation Guide

UK /bɛˈbɛ/

The 'b' is voiced, 'e' is open.

US /bɛˈbɛ/

Similar to the European pronunciation.

Common Errors

  • Mispronouncing the final 'é'
  • Ignoring the stress on the second syllable
  • Adding an extra sound at the end

Rhymes With

café até chaminé canapé

Difficulty Rating

Reading 1/5

Very easy to read.

Writing 1/5

Easy to write.

Speaking 1/5

Easy to pronounce.

Listening 1/5

Easy to hear.

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

criança mãe pai dormir

Learn Next

berço fralda biberão carrinho

Advanced

desenvolvimento pediatria nutrição

Grammar to Know

Definite Articles

o bebé

Pluralization

bebés

Verb Ser/Estar

O bebé é pequeno

Examples by Level

1

O bebé dorme.

The baby sleeps.

Simple present tense.

2

Um bebé pequeno.

A small baby.

Noun + adjective.

3

O bebé chora.

The baby cries.

Subject + verb.

4

Onde está o bebé?

Where is the baby?

Question structure.

5

O bebé ri.

The baby laughs.

Simple present.

6

Eu vi um bebé.

I saw a baby.

Past tense.

7

O bebé é lindo.

The baby is beautiful.

Verb 'ser'.

8

O bebé bebe leite.

The baby drinks milk.

Verb 'beber'.

1

O meu bebé tem seis meses.

2

Eles têm um bebé novo.

3

O bebé gosta de brinquedos.

4

A mãe segura o bebé.

5

O bebé está a gatinhar.

6

O quarto do bebé é azul.

7

O bebé precisa de fraldas.

8

Vamos passear com o bebé.

1

O bebé começou a dar os primeiros passos.

2

É importante vacinar o bebé a tempo.

3

O bebé dormiu a noite toda.

4

Ela cuida do bebé com muito carinho.

5

O bebé reconhece a voz da mãe.

6

O choro do bebé acordou toda a gente.

7

O bebé está a aprender a comer comida sólida.

8

Levei o bebé ao pediatra hoje.

1

A chegada de um bebé muda a rotina da família.

2

É fascinante observar o desenvolvimento do bebé.

3

O bebé demonstrou sinais de desconforto.

4

Muitos pais optam por produtos orgânicos para o bebé.

5

O bebé precisa de estímulos sensoriais constantes.

6

A segurança do bebé é a nossa prioridade.

7

O bebé reagiu positivamente aos estímulos.

8

Preparar a chegada do bebé exige organização.

1

A neurociência explica o desenvolvimento cognitivo do bebé.

2

O apego emocional entre a mãe e o bebé é crucial.

3

A nutrição do bebé nos primeiros meses é fundamental.

4

O bebé exibe uma curiosidade inata pelo ambiente.

5

Estudos mostram como o bebé processa a linguagem.

6

O comportamento do bebé reflete o seu bem-estar.

7

A adaptação do bebé ao novo ambiente foi rápida.

8

O bebé é um ser de enorme potencial.

1

A fragilidade do bebé evoca um instinto protetor ancestral.

2

O bebé representa a tabula rasa da consciência humana.

3

A observação do bebé revela muito sobre a evolução humana.

4

O bebé é o centro da dinâmica familiar contemporânea.

5

A psicologia do bebé é um campo vasto de estudo.

6

O bebé, em sua pureza, desafia as normas sociais.

7

A linguagem do bebé é um sistema complexo de sinais.

8

O desenvolvimento do bebé é um milagre biológico.

Common Collocations

bebé recém-nascido
cuidar do bebé
roupa de bebé
choro do bebé
banho do bebé
quarto do bebé
bebé a dormir
alimentar o bebé
bebé saudável
carrinho de bebé

Idioms & Expressions

"Dormir como um bebé"

To sleep very well

Depois de um dia longo, dormi como um bebé.

casual

"Passos de bebé"

Small, steady progress

Estamos a avançar com passos de bebé.

neutral

"Cara de bebé"

Looking very young

Ele tem cara de bebé, mas já trabalha.

casual

"O bebé da casa"

The youngest person

Ela é o bebé da casa, todos a mimam.

casual

"Ter um bebé"

To give birth

Ela vai ter um bebé em breve.

neutral

"Beijar o bebé"

To show affection

Todos queriam beijar o bebé.

neutral

Easily Confused

bebé vs beber

similar spelling

beber is a verb (to drink)

O bebé quer beber leite.

bebé vs bebê

same word, different region

different accent mark

Bebé (PT) vs Bebê (BR).

bebé vs criança

both refer to children

criança is older

O bebé é um recém-nascido, a criança já anda.

bebé vs infante

both mean young

infante is formal/literary

Use bebé in daily life.

Sentence Patterns

A1

O [bebé] + [verb]

O bebé dorme.

A2

Ter um [bebé]

Ela vai ter um bebé.

B1

Cuidar do [bebé]

Eu cuido do bebé.

B1

O [bebé] + [adjective]

O bebé é saudável.

B2

O [bebé] + [prepositional phrase]

O bebé está no berço.

Word Family

Nouns

bebé infant
bebézito little baby

Verbs

beber to drink (unrelated but similar)

Adjectives

bebé baby (as in baby blue)

Related

infância the period of being a baby

How to Use It

frequency

9/10

Formality Scale

formal: infante neutral: bebé casual: bebézito

Common Mistakes

Using 'bebê' (Brazilian spelling) bebé
European Portuguese uses the acute accent.
Forgetting the article o bebé
Nouns usually need articles in Portuguese.
Using 'bebé' for a teenager adolescente
Bebé is only for infants.
Pluralizing as 'bebés' without the accent change bebés
The accent must be maintained.
Confusing with 'beber' (verb) bebé (noun), beber (verb)
They sound similar but have different meanings.

Tips

💡

Memory Palace

Imagine a cradle in your living room.

💡

Native Context

Use it when talking about family photos.

🌍

Cultural Insight

Portuguese culture is very family-oriented.

💡

Grammar Rule

Always check the article (o/um).

💡

Say It Right

Stress the second syllable.

💡

Don't Mix Accents

Use acute for Portugal, circumflex for Brazil.

💡

Did You Know?

It's an onomatopoeic word.

💡

Study Smart

Use flashcards with images of babies.

💡

Rhyme Time

Rhyme it with café.

💡

Register

It is safe to use in all social settings.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

Be-Be: Be a baby!

Visual Association

A tiny crib with a soft blanket.

Word Web

infant child family cradle milk

Challenge

Describe a baby you know using 3 adjectives.

Word Origin

Onomatopoeic

Original meaning: Imitation of early childhood sounds

Cultural Context

None, universally positive term.

Directly equivalent to 'baby'.

Many songs about babies Baby Shark The Boss Baby

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

at home

  • O bebé está a chorar
  • Dá o biberão ao bebé
  • O bebé dormiu

at the doctor

  • O bebé tem febre
  • O peso do bebé
  • Vacina do bebé

at the park

  • Que bebé tão bonito
  • O bebé está no carrinho
  • O bebé quer brincar

shopping

  • Roupa para bebé
  • Fraldas de bebé
  • Brinquedos de bebé

Conversation Starters

"Tens algum bebé na tua família?"

"Como é que se cuida de um bebé?"

"Qual é a parte mais difícil de ter um bebé?"

"Lembras-te de quando eras bebé?"

"Viste aquele bebé tão giro na rua?"

Journal Prompts

Descreve um bebé que conheças.

Como mudaria a tua vida se tivesses um bebé?

Qual é a melhor coisa sobre os bebés?

Escreve sobre as necessidades de um bebé.

Frequently Asked Questions

8 questions

In Brazil, it is spelled 'bebê' with a circumflex accent.

Usually, it is for infants, but people often use it affectionately for slightly older children.

Ter um bebé.

It is grammatically masculine, but refers to both boys and girls.

It is an open 'e' sound.

Usually not; we use 'cria' or specific animal terms.

It can be patronizing or mean they are acting immaturely.

Bebés.

Test Yourself

fill blank A1

O ___ está a dormir.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: bebé

Bebé is the only logical subject here.

multiple choice A2

What is the plural of bebé?

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: bebés

Add an 's' to the end.

true false B1

Is 'bebé' a feminine noun?

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: False

It is masculine (o bebé).

match pairs B1

Word

Meaning

All matched!

Vocabulary matching.

sentence order B2

Tap words below to build the sentence
Correct! Not quite. Correct answer:

Correct SVO structure.

fill blank B1

Eu ___ do bebé todos os dias.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: cuido

Cuido (take care) is the correct verb.

multiple choice A2

Which word is a synonym for bebé?

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: recém-nascido

Recém-nascido means newborn.

true false B2

Can 'bebé' be used as an adjective?

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: True

Yes, e.g., 'azul bebé'.

sentence order C1

Tap words below to build the sentence
Correct! Not quite. Correct answer:

Observar o desenvolvimento do bebé.

fill blank C1

O ___ emocional é vital.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: apego

Apego (attachment) fits the context.

Score: /10

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