Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the ninth year of elementary school, addresses indirect transitive verbs. When are verbs classified this way? Let's find out? To do so, answer the questions based on the text. what is cyberactivism!
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:
Around 2009, a new way of manifesting itself politically began to gain traction. Citizens around the world found they could voice their opinions and advocate for the _____ causes they believed in without leaving their computer or cell phone screen.
This use of the network to state ideas and promote mobilizations was called cyberactivism, or digital activism.
In times of pandemic, when it is not safe to promote or participate in agglomerations, such as street demonstrations, cyberactivism has gained even more importance!
Available in:
Question 1 - Identify the passage in which the highlighted verb is indirect transitive:
( ) “[…] it started to gain strength.”
( ) “Citizens from all over the world found out […]”
( ) “[…] cyberactivism has won even more important!"
Question 2 - The indirect transitive verb, in the excerpt identified above, expresses a fully completed fact. In this context, he is:
( ) in past tense perfect.
( ) in the past tense imperfect.
( ) in past tense more-than-perfect.
Question 3 - In the passage “[…] defend the _____ causes that they believed […]”, the indirect transitive verb requires the preposition:
( ) "in".
( ) "per".
( ) "with".
Question 4 – Mark, in the segment below, the verb in the infinitive which is indirect transitive:
"In times of pandemic, when it is not safe to promote or participate in gatherings, such as street demonstrations [...]"
Question 5 - It can be concluded that a verb is indirect transitive, when:
( ) no supplement.
( ) needs a complement without a preposition.
( ) needs complement with preposition.
Per Denyse Lage Fonseca
Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
report this ad