Portuguese activity, aimed at eighth grade students, explores the interrogative adverbs and interrogative pronouns. These are the terms we use to ask! How about studying them in the text about The Book of Tongues, written by Ruth Rocha? So, get to work, folks!
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:
Why isn't there a single language for all the peoples of the world? How did languages come about? What did people say first? What are the most widely spoken languages? How many languages are there today and how many were spread across the Earth? Wars served to spread languages, and some words are used all over the world. Ruth Rocha and Otávio Roth talk about languages with us.
Available in: .
Question 1 - In prayer “Like have languages emerged?”, the highlighted term is:
( ) an adverb that indicates intensity.
( ) a subordinate conjunction that indicates comparison.
( ) an interrogative adverb that indicates mood.
Question 2 - Underline the term that works as an interrogative pronoun in this segment:
"What did people say first?"
Question 3 - In the segment "Which are the most spoken languages?", the interrogative pronoun "Which" syntactically performs the function of:
( ) subject
( ) adnominal assistant
( ) verbal complement
Question 4 - In the passage “[…] how many were spread over the Earth?”, the interrogative pronoun “how many” refers to:
( ) to languages.
( ) to wars.
( ) the words.
Question 5 - Check the sentence in which the interrogative adverb was used correctly:
( ) “There is no single language for all the peoples of the world. Why?"
( ) “There is no single language for all the peoples of the world. Why?"
( ) “There is no single language for all the peoples of the world. Why?"
Question 6 – In the context of the sentence above, the interrogative adverb indicates the circumstance of:
( ) place
( ) time
( ) cause
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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