Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the ninth year of elementary school, about direct transitive verbs. When are verbs classified this way? Let's learn? To do this, answer the questions that are based on the text. Google launches hieroglyph translator!
You can download this Portuguese language activity in editable Word template, ready to print in PDF and also the answered activity.
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SCHOOL: DATE:
PROF: CLASS:
NAME:
Read:
A long time ago, the people who inhabited Ancient Egypt used characters very different from those we know today to communicate. They were called hieroglyphics, and only people with a certain kind of power made use of such a form of writing.
The hierograph is, therefore, one of the oldest forms of writing. Today, it is studied by anthropologists, historians and other researchers. Translating the hieroglyphs is a way to learn more about the history of that place.
That's why Google recently launched a hieroglyph translator that uses machine learning to decode ancient Egyptian characters.
The tool, named Fabricius, is part of the company's Art and Culture application.
Mariana Alencar. Available in:. (Fragment with cuts).
Question 1 - Highlight the verbs that make up this segment of the text:
“[…] the people who inhabited Ancient Egypt used very different characters […]”
Question 2 - The previously underlined verbs are direct transitives, because:
( ) did not require a complement.
( ) required complement without preposition.
( ) required complement with preposition.
Question 3 - In the passage “[…] Google launched, recently, a translator of hieroglyphics […]”, the highlighted adverb adds to the direct transitive verb a circumstance of:
A:
Question 4 – In the period “The tool, named Fabricius, is part of the company's Art and Culture application.”, the verb “does” is:
( ) intransitive.
( ) direct transitive.
( ) indirect transitive.
Question 5 - The direct transitive verbs that make up the text express certainties. Thus, it can be said that they were used in the mode:
( ) indicative.
( ) subjunctive.
( ) imperative.
Per Denyse Lage Fonseca
Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
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