-ão
Portuguese
    
    
Etymology 1
    
From Old Galician-Portuguese -on, from Latin -ōnem. Akin to Spanish -ón, Italian -one and French -on, compare Romanian -oi.
Suffix
    
-ão m (noun-forming suffix, plural -ões, feminine -ona, feminine plural -onas)
- forms the augmentative of nouns
- forms nouns, from nouns denoting things, meaning “big thing,” usually but not necessarily with the same gender
 - used to refer to things affectionately
 - forms nouns, from nouns, implying that the suffixed noun is powerful or good
 - in nouns that are formed from, or homonymous with, an adjective, it augments the quality expressed by the adjective
- cabeludo (“long-haired (adjective); long-haired person (noun)”) + -ão → cabeludão (“person with very long hair”)
 
 
 - forms the masculine of animal names (whether the animal refers to females or to males and females)
 - forms nouns, from nouns, denoting an item of the same class as the suffixed noun, or which shares a characteristic with the suffixed noun
 - (slang) forms nouns, from a numeral X divisible by ten and greater than thirty, meaning “someone in his Xs”
- quarenta (“forty”) + -ão → quarentão (“someone in his forties”)
 
 - forms nouns, from a verb X, meaning a strong or violent instance of doing X
 - (informal, derogatory) forms nouns, from a verb X, meaning an agent of such verb
- fugir (“to flee”) + -ão → fujão (“someone who flees from something”)
 - cagar (“to shit”) + -ão → cagão (“someone who shits upon something, a coward”)
 - mijar (“to piss”) + -ão → mijão (“someone who wets themselves”)
 - arregar (“to back off”) + -ão → arregão (“someone who backs off from a challenge, a quitter”)
 
 - (Brazil, slang) forms nouns, from a numeral X, meaning “X amount of money” or “a bill worth X”
 
Etymology 2
    
From Old Galician-Portuguese -ão, from Latin -ānus (“-ian”). Doublet of -ano.
Suffix
    
-ão m (noun-forming suffix, plural -ãos, feminine -ã, feminine plural -ãs)
-ão (adjective-forming suffix, feminine -ã, masculine plural -ãos, feminine plural -ãs)
- (no longer productive) forms adjectives, nouns and proper nouns referring to a location or type of location, meaning “of or relating to that location” and nouns meaning “someone from that location”
 
Suffix
    
-ão m (noun-forming suffix, plural -ões)
Etymology 4
    
From Old Galician-Portuguese -an, from an (modern Portuguese: hão) from Latin habent, third-person plural present indicative of habeō (“to have”).
Suffix
    
-ão
Pronunciation
    
- (Brazil) IPA(key): (stress on the penultimate syllable) /ɐ̃w̃/ [ɐ̃ʊ̯̃]
 
- (Portugal) IPA(key): (stress on the penultimate syllable) /ɐ̃w̃/
 
- IPA(key): /ɐ̃w̃/ (paroxytone)
 
Usage notes
    
Some words ending in -ão pluralise as -ães. However, in these cases the -ão is not a suffix and derives from Old Portuguese -an, from Latin -ānem, -anēs.