To "cringe" is literally an action. It is a kind of gesture. It involves face and body language. I know it when I see it. It is the behavior, for example, of someone who expects to be hit, or yelled at. Rather than trying to describe it myself, let me look up a definition in a dictionary, because that is what dictionaries are good for.
1. To shrink back, as in fear; cower.
2. To behave in a servile way; fawn.
For definition #1, imagine someone with an expression of fear on their face. Imagine them stepping backward half a step. Imagine them folding their body a bit to make them look shorter. Imagine them holding up their two arms as if trying to stop someone from hitting them. That's cringing.
For definition #2, imagine someone who likes to be near a bully. Imagine an expression that is a mixture of fear and worship. They keep their body folded a little bit to look short. Imagine that they agree with everything the bully says.
Cringing person: "Isn't it a lovely day?"
Bully: "No, it's a bad day."
Cringing person: "Oh, yes, of course, a bad day, a very bad day, I meant to say bad day."
I know a little Spanish, I don't know Portuguese. Google Translate is showing me the translation "vergonhoso," but, I agree, that seems wrong. "Cringing" is more like fear than shame. It is also showing me two other translations:
aninhar-se com medo
adular servilmente
Those might be just like dictionary definitions #1 and #2.
Suppose someone does something poorly or clumsily. Someone else says "That makes me cringe," or "that's cringeworthy." This is a kind of exaggeration. It means "it's so bad, that it hurts me to watch it. It makes me cringe: stop, stop, please stop!"