Portuguese activity, aimed at ninth grade students, aims to study the direct object and indirect object. Do you know the difference between them? Let's learn? The questions presented are based on the text. the frog prince, written by Jon Seieszka.
You can download this activity in editable Word template, ready to print in PDF and also the answered activity.
Download this Portuguese exercise at:
SCHOOL: DATE:
PROF: CLASS:
NAME:
Read:
A very evil sorceress turned a handsome prince into a frog, only a princess's kiss would undo the spell.
One day, a beautiful princess came near the pond where the prince lived. Full of hope to be freed from the spell, he asked her for a kiss. As she was very good, she overcame her disgust and, without knowing anything, answered the frog's request: she gave him a kiss.
Immediately the frog became a prince again, he married the princess and they were happily ever after.
Seieszka, Jon. “The really ugly duckling and other crazy stories”. São Paulo: Companhia das Letrinhas, 1997.
Question 1 - In the initial period of the text, the verb “transform” needs two complements: one without a preposition (direct object) and another with a preposition (indirect object). Identify:
a) the direct object of the verb "transform":
b) the indirect object of the verb "transform":
Question 2 - In the sentence “[…] he asked you for a kiss.”, the pronoun “him” works as:
( ) direct object of the verb “to ask”.
( ) indirect object of the verb “to ask”.
( ) prepositioned direct object of the verb “to ask”.
Question 3 – Check the sentence whose verb requires two objects:
( ) “[…] disgust won […]”
( ) “[…] answered the frog's request […]”
( ) “[…] gave him a kiss.”
Question 4 - List, numbering as indicated:
( ) “[…] only the kiss of a princess would undo the spell.”
( ) "Immediately the frog returned to be prince […]”
( ) "[…] got married with the princess […]”
Question 5 - In the excerpt “[…] and they were happy […]”, the term “happy” is:
( ) predicative of the subject.
( ) direct object of the verb “were”.
( ) indirect object of the verb “were”.
By Denyse Lage Fonseca – Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
At answers are in the link above the header.
report this ad