Portuguese activity, aimed at seventh-year students, explores the adverbial phrase of time. Let's analyze those expressions that indicate the notion of time relative to the facts that occurred? So, answer the proposed questions based on the text that the book presents to us. Suddenly it works, written by Ruth Rocha!
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:
Beatriz, the narrator of this book, is twelve years old and is so moody that Irene, the housekeeper, sometimes calls the girl her mother-in-law. It's just that her life isn't easy: her legs keep growing and at school the only boy who wants to date her is Sebastião, a lackluster. To complicate matters, her mother has remarried, and now she has to share the TV with Pedro, Alfredo's son, who only thinks about watching a football game. What the hell! But, little by little, unexpected things happen and what seemed unbearable only turns out to be different.
Available in:. (Fragment).
Question 1 - Identify the passage in the text in which there is an adverbial phrase of tense:
( ) “[…] sometimes he calls the girl his mother-in-law.”
() “[…] His legs keep growing […]”
( ) “[…] it's Sebastião, a dull one.”
Question 2 - The adverbial phrase of tense, which makes up the passage identified above, points to a verb that expresses:
( ) a state of a character in the book.
( ) an action of a character in the book.
( ) a characteristic of a character in the book.
Question 3 - The adverbial phrase "sometimes" could be replaced by the adverb:
( ) constantly
( ) momentarily
( ) sporadically
Question 4 – In the excerpt “To complicate matters, your mother got married again […]", the highlighted adverbial phrase modifies the sense of a verb that indicates a fact:
( ) unfinished
( ) concluded
( ) hypothetical
Question 5 - In the period that closes the text above, the adverbial phrase “little by little” adds a circumstance of time:
( ) to the verb “happen”.
( ) to the verb “seemed”.
( ) to the verbal phrase “it will show itself”.
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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