Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the eighth year of elementary school, explores the comma. Let's analyze comma usage situations? To do so, answer the questions that refer to the text about Bananal, tourist city of São Paulo.
This Portuguese language activity is available for download in an editable Word template, ready to print in PDF and also the completed activity.
Download this Portuguese exercise at:
SCHOOL: DATE:
PROF: CLASS:
NAME:
Read:
The cozy city is located in the east region of São Paulo. It is considered one of the 70 tourist cities in the state. The municipality keeps many stories in its monuments, mansions and farms.
In Bananal, tourists can visit the beautiful waterfalls of the Bananal Ecological Park, walk through preserved farms, visit the historic center and feel the peace of the interior. It is possible to find handicrafts throughout the city.
During the coffee cycle Bananal experienced the splendor of being one of the richest cities in Brazil. With the decay of coffee, the farms focused on milk production.
Today, the municipality is inhabited by different residents, who carry values and traditions.
Available in: .
Question 1 - In “[…] tourists can visit the beautiful waterfalls of the Bananal Ecological Park, walk through preserved farms, visit the historic center […]”, the commas indicate:
( ) facts that add up.
( ) alternating facts.
( ) contrasting facts.
Question 2 - The fragment below was transcribed without the comma. Put it on:
“During the Bananal coffee cycle it experienced the splendor of being one of the cities […]”
Question 3 – In the part “With the decay of coffee, the farms focused […]”, the comma indicates:
( ) an omission.
( ) an insertion.
( ) an offset.
Question 4 - In "Today, the municipality is inhabited by different residents [...]", the comma separates:
( ) a bet.
( ) a vocative.
( ) an adverbial adjunct.
Question 5 - In the sentence “[…] distinct residents, who carry values […]”, the comma precedes:
( ) a relative pronoun.
( ) a personal pronoun.
( ) a demonstrative pronoun.
Per Denyse Lage Fonseca – Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
At answers are in the link above the header.
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