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Prueba de Mecanografía en Portugués (Português) de 15 Segundos

Practica tu velocidad de escritura en Portugués (Português) con esta prueba cronometrada de 15 segundos. Vocabulario nativo real, resultados instantáneos.

Otras Pruebas en Portugués

15-Second Portuguese (Português) Typing Test

The 15-Second Portuguese (Português) typing test measures peak keystroke velocity with no endurance component. At this length, short tests rarely include enough ã and õ occurrences to expose the nasal vowel challenge; the true Portuguese bottleneck only becomes statistically apparent at 1+ minutes Use it for a quick daily warm-up; follow it with a 1-minute or 3-minute Portuguese test for a complete picture.

What 15-Second Reveals — and Misses — About Portuguese Typing

15-second WPM is typically 15–25% higher than the same typist's 1-minute score — there is no fatigue component. For Portuguese specifically, low — 10–20 words in 15 seconds may not include any of a language's special or rare characters — meaning ã, õ (nasal vowels), ç (cedilla), and accented vowels (â, ê, ô, à, é, í, ó, ú), which appear in 6–10% of characters in natural Portuguese text — nasal vowels alone appear in 2–3% of text, may not appear at all. This makes short Portuguese tests good for tracking peak speed but unreliable for assessing Portuguese fluency. For a complete picture, pair this with a 3-minute or 5-minute Portuguese test.

Portuguese WPM Benchmarks at 15-Second

Typists who know English score 33–41 WPM on a 1-minute Portuguese test on average — 12–18% lower than English — nasal vowels (ã, õ) require a dead-key sequence unique to Portuguese and not present in any other language here. 15-second WPM is typically 15–25% higher than the same typist's 1-minute score — there is no fatigue component. The primary speed barrier in Portuguese is nasal vowels (ã and õ) require tilde + vowel dead-key sequences that have no parallel in Spanish, French, or any other Latin-script language here — this is the distinctively Portuguese challenge. Once those are automatic, Portuguese WPM climbs quickly toward your English baseline.

Making the Most of Short Portuguese Practice Sessions

for Brazilian Portuguese, the ABNT2 layout gives ç and ~ dedicated keys; on Mac: Option+N then A = ã, Option+N then O = õ; on Windows: Alt+0227 = ã, Alt+0245 = õ. For short tests, focus on maintaining peak rhythm without any hesitation — since low — 10–20 words in 15 seconds may not include any of a language's special or rare characters, the words you type should all be familiar territory. Spanish shares some diacritics but has no nasal vowels — Portuguese is significantly harder for QWERTY typists; Brazilian and European Portuguese use different keyboard layouts.

Is a 15-second Portuguese test enough to assess my typing?

For warm-up and peak-speed tracking, yes. For a proper assessment, no — short tests rarely include enough ã and õ occurrences to expose the nasal vowel challenge; the true Portuguese bottleneck only becomes statistically apparent at 1+ minutes Use the 1-minute Portuguese test for your benchmark and the 3-minute or 5-minute test for professional purposes.

Why is my Portuguese WPM lower than my English WPM?

Portuguese typing is 12–18% lower than English — nasal vowels (ã, õ) require a dead-key sequence unique to Portuguese and not present in any other language here because of nasal vowels (ã and õ) require tilde + vowel dead-key sequences that have no parallel in Spanish, French, or any other Latin-script language here — this is the distinctively Portuguese challenge. for Brazilian Portuguese, the ABNT2 layout gives ç and ~ dedicated keys; on Mac: Option+N then A = ã, Option+N then O = õ; on Windows: Alt+0227 = ã, Alt+0245 = õ. With focused practice on the unfamiliar characters, the gap closes faster than most typists expect.