Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the ninth year of elementary school, addresses the direct transitive verbs. When do they rank like that? When they need a complement without a preposition! Let's analyze them in the text The pets want to play with you? So, answer the proposed questions!
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 book “Ache o Bicho” is made for those who love having fun with pets and helping them to have a better life.
The pages feature classic pastimes such as mazes, seven mistakes and “where is it?” starring dogs, cats, birds, rodents, fish and turtles. The illustrations are so cute that you smile just by browsing!
The whole family can play together – and also be proud of doing a good deed, as each copy generates a donation to an NGOs that save stray animals.
Buy yours now! The book is on sale at Petz stores and at bancadobem.com.br.
“Todos” magazine, Jun/Jul 2019.
Question 1 - In “The little animals want play with you!”, the underlined verb is direct transitive:
( ) because it required a complement without a preposition.
( ) because it required a complement with a preposition.
( ) because it required two complements: one without a preposition, the other with a preposition.
Question 2 - Locate the complement of the direct transitive verb “ama” at the beginning of the text:
Question 3 - Identify the passage that contains a direct transitive verb:
( ) “The pages bring classic pastimes, such as mazes […]”
( ) “The illustrations are so cute that we smile […]”
( ) “The book is for sale at Petz stores and at bancadobem.com.br.”
Question 4 – Underline below the infinitive verb that is direct transitive:
“The whole family can play together – and also be proud of doing a good deed […]”
Question 5 - In “[…] NGOs that save abandoned animals.”, the direct transitive verb expresses:
( ) an action of NGOsS.
( ) a state of NGOsS.
( ) a characteristic of NGOsS.
Question 6 – In the sentence “Buy yours now!”, the direct transitive verb was used:
( ) in indicative mode.
( ) in subjunctive mode.
( ) in imperative mode.
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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