Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the ninth year of elementary school, about the reflective voice. What does this verbal voice indicate? Let's find out? To do this, answer the questions that refer to a fragment of the book traps of differences.
You can download this Portuguese language activity in an editable Word template, ready to print in PDF and also the completed activity.
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SCHOOL: DATE:
PROF: CLASS:
NAME:
Read:
Are we all the same or are we all different? Do we want to be the same or do we want to be different? There was a time when the ____ answer harbored self-assurance in the first term. It's been a quarter of a century, however, that the answer has shifted. Starting in the second half of the 1970s, we began to see ourselves enveloped in a cultural and ideological atmosphere entirely new, in which the awareness that we are different in fact and of right. It is called the “right to difference”, the right to cultural difference, the right to be, being different.
PIERUCCI, A. F. traps of differences. São Paulo: Editora 34, 1999.
Question 1 - Identify the pronoun that completes the space in the text to indicate the reflective voice of the verb “sheltered”:
( ) “me”.
( ) “you”.
( ) “if”.
Question 2 - In the passage “It's been a quarter of a century, however, that the answer has shifted.”, the verb in the reflective voice expresses a fact:
( ) closed in the past.
( ) unfinished in the past.
( ) sporadic in the past.
Question 3 - In “[…] in which consciousness seems to generalize […]”, the reflexive verb is:
( ) in the infinitive.
( ) in the gerund.
( ) in the participle.
Question 4 – There is a verb in the reflective voice in the segment:
( ) "Are we all the same or are we all different?"
( ) “[…] we came to see ourselves enveloped in a cultural atmosphere […]”
( ) “It is the so-called “right to difference”, the right to cultural difference […]”
Question 5 - It can be concluded that a 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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