Portuguese activity, focused on eighth grade elementary school students, about the reflective voice verbs. What do they indicate? That the subject is an agent, is he a patient, or is he an agent and patient? How about learning? To do this, answer the questions based on the text that the book presents to us. Complete Peanuts: 1969-1970.
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:
Complete Peanuts: 1969-1970 it could no longer be the portrait of its time. Lucy declares herself a “new feminist”, Patty Pimentinha gets in trouble for not respecting the school's dress code and Snoopy's relationship with the Daisy Hill Puppy Farm reaches a tumultuous climax... Not to mention the revelation that Snoopy's little companion bird is named Woodstock! It's an incredible decade in Schulz's career, where the strip's characters, humorous situations, stories and conflicts are at their peak.
Available in: .
Question 1 - Identify the sentence that has a verb in the reflective voice:
( ) “Lucy declares herself a 'new feminist' […]”
( ) “It's an incredible decade in Schulz's career […]”
( ) “[…] the stories and conflicts of the strip are at their peak.”
Question 2 - In the passage “[…] Patty Pimentinha gets in trouble for not respecting the school's dress rules […]”, the verb in the reflective voice could be replaced by:
( ) “revolts”.
( ) “gets bored”.
( ) “complicates”.
Question 3 - Underline the verb in the reflective voice in this period of the text:
"Not to mention the revelation that Snoopy's little companion bird is called Woodstock!"
Question 4 – The verbs in the reflexive voice, analyzed above, were used in the same way. Identify it:
( ) indicative mode.
( ) subjunctive mode.
( ) imperative mode.
Question 5 - It can be concluded that the verb is in the reflective voice when:
( ) the subject is an agent.
( ) the subject is patient.
( ) the subject is agent and patient.
By Denyse Lage Fonseca
Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
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