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In the dry regions of Brazil, during periods of severe drought, cattle would often wander into "brejos" (swampy areas) in search of the last bits of green grass or water. However, these swamps were dangerous; the heavy animals would often get stuck in the deep mud. Once a cow was "no brejo" (in the swamp), it was incredibly difficult and often impossible to rescue it. Farmers would use the phrase to signal that the animal—and the investment it represented—was lost. 2. The Famous Song

The phrase (literally "The cow has already gone to the swamp") is a famous Brazilian Portuguese idiom meaning that a situation has gone completely wrong, is beyond repair, or has "gone down the tubes."

: By repeating "the cow has already gone to the swamp," the song suggests that society has reached a point of no return where things have become unfixable. 3. Literary Satire

While it is most famously known today as a classic pagode or moda de viola song by , the idiom has roots in rural life and a specific cultural history: 1. The Rural Origin

The writer and humorist also used this expression as the title of his famous book, The Cow Went to the Swamp / A Vaca Foi Pro Brejo .

The expression was immortalized in Brazilian culture by the 1970s song composed by Lourival dos Santos, Tião Carreiro, and Vicente P. Machado.

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