Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the eighth year of elementary school, addresses the verbs in indicative mode. What do they express in the communicative context? Let's learn? To do this, answer the questions that refer to the text. And there was light!
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:
Today, it is difficult to imagine the world without electric light, invented by the American scientist Thomas Edison (1847-1931). From its creation, just press a button, and, in milliseconds, everything becomes clear! But how does this happen? In fact, what lights the lamp is the electric current. This is the role of the switch: as the name says, it is the switch that will interrupt – or not – the passage of energy. If not for him, the lamp would always be on. In this case, imagine the electricity bill!
Teo Scalioni. “MINAS DO SCIENCE” magazine. 2016, p.12. Available in: .
Question 1 - Identify the passage in which the underlined verb is in indicative mode:
( ) “[…] in milliseconds, everything stay clear! […]”
( ) "If not was for him, the lamp would always be on."
( ) "In that case, imagine the electricity bill!"
Question 2 - In the excerpt identified above, the underlined verb is in indicative mode, as it expresses:
( ) a certainty.
( ) a condition.
( ) an orientation.
Question 3 - In the passage “But like does this occur?”, the underlined term modifies the meaning of the verb in the indicative way, expressing:
( ) place.
( ) mode.
( ) time.
Question 4 – In the period "Actually, what lights the lamp is the electric current.", the subject of the verb in the indicative mode "lights up" is:
( ) "O".
( ) "the light bulb".
( ) “the electric current”.
Question 5 - In the segment “[…] he is going to interrupt – or not – the passage of energy.”, the phrase in the indicative mode is equivalent to the verb:
( ) "interrupts".
( ) “will interrupt”.
( ) “interrupt”.
By Denyse Lage Fonseca
Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
report this ad