Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the first year of high school, addresses comma. Let's look at the uses of this punctuation mark in the text on Fran Matsumoto? To do this, answer the proposed questions!
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SCHOOL: DATE:
PROF: CLASS:
NAME:
Read:
Fran Matsumoto was born in the Paraíba Valley in the interior of São Paulo. She has always drawn, but started studying illustration after earning a degree in Biology. In 2021, her first book as an author and illustrator, Tatá, received the Cátedra 10 distinction seal, by the Unesco Cátedra de Leitura PUC-Rio in 2020.
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Question 1 – The excerpt below has been transcribed without a comma. Put it:
“Fran Matsumoto was born in the Paraíba Valley in the interior of São Paulo.”
Question 2 – Watch:
“She always drew, but started studying illustration after graduating in Biology.”
The comma before the conjunction "but" is:
( ) prohibited.
( ) optional.
( ) mandatory.
Question 3 – In the segment “In 2021, your first book as an author and illustrator […]”, the comma separates an adverbial adjunct that expresses:
( ) place.
( ) mode.
( ) time.
Question 4 – In the passage “[…] her first book as an author and illustrator, Tatá, received the seal of distinction Cátedra 10 […]”, the commas indicate:
( ) a bet.
( ) a vocative.
( ) a predicate.
Question 5 – In “[…] made with colored pencils, dry pastel and a lot of affection.”, the comma indicates:
( ) the omission of elements.
( ) the enumeration of elements.
( ) the displacement of elements.
By Denyse Lage Fonseca
Graduated in Letters and specialist in distance education.