Portuguese activity, aimed at ninth grade students, aims to study the personal pronoun (straight and oblique). Do you know the role they play in text? Let's learn? The questions were prepared based on the text Did you know?, which tells us fun facts about the stars.
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:
Stars don't just shine at night. They shine all the time! We are the ones who can only see them after the sun goes down. That's because, during the day, sunlight spreads through the atmosphere and prevents us from seeing what happens in space. Also, let us not forget that the Sun itself is a star – this one we see shine during the day!
These spheres glow because near their center the temperature is very high. This causes the hydrogen that is left there to turn into helium gas. This reaction generates energy that appears in the form of light.
Available in:
Question 1 - In the phrase "They shine all the time!", the personal pronoun "They" resumes:
A.
Question 2 - In the context of the sentence above, the pronoun "They" works as:
( ) subject
( ) object
( ) predicative of the subject
Question 3 - Check the clause that has an oblique personal pronoun, that is, a pronoun that works as a complement:
( ) “We're the only ones who can see them […]”
( ) “[…] this one we see shine during the day!”
( ) "This reaction generates energy that appears in the form of light."
Question 4 - Identify what the oblique pronoun identified in the previous question refers to:
A.
Question 5 - In the excerpt “We can't either US forget that the Sun itself is a star […]”, the personal pronoun “us” is:
( ) straight
( ) oblique
( ) oblique and reflective
Question 6 – The underlined term is a straight personal pronoun in:
( ) "[…] That we we see it shine during the day!"
( ) “These spheres shine because near their center […]"
( ) “That makes the hydrogen that remains there to turn into helium gas.”
By Denyse Lage Fonseca – Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
At answers are in the link above the header.
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