Portuguese activity, focused on students in the ninth grade of elementary school, addresses relative pronouns. How about analyzing these pronouns in the text about the film Bee Movie – The Story of a Bee? To do this, answer the proposed questions! In “[…] a cheerful Manhattan flower girl with whom she breaks the bee rules […]”, is the pronoun “who” relative?
You can download this Portuguese language activity in an editable Word template, ready to print to PDF and also the activity with answers.
Download this Portuguese exercise at:
SCHOOL: DATE:
PROF: CLASS:
NAME:
Read:
Barry B. Benson is a recent graduate and dreams of a job at Honex where he can produce honey. In this way, he ventures outside the hive and discovers a hitherto entirely unknown world. That's when he meets Vanessa Bloome, a cheerful Manhattan florist with whom he breaks the bee rules and starts talking regularly. Soon they become friends, which makes Barry know humans better. However, Barry discovers that anyone can buy honey in supermarkets, which makes him deeply angry because he considers that they are stealing the production of bees. That's when he decides to sue humans, with the intention of correcting this injustice.
Available in:. (With cut and adaptation).
Question 1 – In “Barry B. Benson is a recent graduate and dreams of a job at Honex where he will be able to produce honey.”, There is a relative pronoun. Identify it:
Question 2 – The pronoun identified above is related to:
Question 3 – Watch:
“[…] a cheerful Manhattan florist with whom she breaks the rules of the bees […]”
In this passage, the pronoun “who” is:
( ) relative.
( ) Undefined.
( ) interrogative.
Question 4 – In the following passage, a “that” is a relative pronoun. Highlight it:
“However, Barry discovers that anyone can buy honey in supermarkets, which makes him deeply angry as he considers that they are stealing the production of the bees.”
Question 5 – It can be stated that:
( ) there are variable and invariable relative pronouns in the text.
( ) the relative pronouns used in the text are invariable.
( ) the relative pronouns used in the text are variable in gender and number.
By Denyse Lage Fonseca
Graduated in Letters and specialist in distance education.