Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the ninth year of elementary school, addresses the prepositions. How about analyzing the relationships of meaning established by them? To do this, answer the questions based on the text that the documentary presents us Gray Signs! Learn more about this production, which is a tribute to filmmaker Olney São Paulo, by reading the text! And, of course, don't forget to study prepositions!
You can download this Portuguese language activity 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:
Olney's Struggle São Paulo _______ the Dragon of Evil
the documentary Gray Signs opens a crack in the history of national cinema to rescue important moments in the life of filmmaker Olney São Paulo that were lost over the years. Self-taught, backwoodsman from Feira de Santana and owner of unique audiovisual poetry, Olney's trajectory was interrupted by the atrocities of the Military Dictatorship in Brazil. Arrested, prosecuted and tortured for making a cinematographic work,
Gray Signs is a tribute to this Brazilian hero and his tireless quest for freedom.Available in:. (With cut).
Question 1 - In “The Struggle of Olney São Paulo _______ the Dragon of Maldade […]”, the intention is to express the idea of adversity. Thus, the preposition:
( ) "with"
( ) "about"
( ) "against"
Question 2 - In the fragment “The documentary Gray Signs it opens a crack in history […]”, the term “in” is the contraction of a preposition with the definite article “a”. Check this preposition:
( ) "in"
( ) "in"
( ) "per"
Question 3 - In the prayer “[…] to rescue outstanding moments […]”, the preposition “to” indicates:
( ) a condition
( ) a purpose
( ) a conclusion
Question 4 - In the segment “[…] a tribute to this Brazilian hero […]”, the “a” is:
( ) a preposition
( ) a definite article
( ) an oblique personal pronoun
Question 5 - In the part “[…] and his tireless search for freedom.”, there is a preposition. Point it out:
( ) "and"
( ) "your"
( ) "per"
By Denyse Lage Fonseca
Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
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