Portuguese activity, aimed at seventh-year students, aims to study the signs of punctuation. They are essential to understanding the text, aren't they? So, let's understand how they work in the construction of the joke The medicine? So, get to work!
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:
The doctor asks the patient:
– You took the medicine I prescribed for you
The patient answers:
– Impossible, doctor. The glass had a label that said, "Keep closed."
Available in: .
Question 1 - In the sentence that introduces the joke, the colon announces:
a) the doctor's speech.
b) the patient's speech.
c) the speech of the one who tells the joke.
d) the speech of the narrator-character of the joke.
Question 2 - In the joke above, the phrase "- You took the medicine I prescribed for you" must end with:
a) full stop
b) exclamation point
c) question mark
d) ellipses
Question 3 - In the passage “– Impossible, doctor.”, the comma separates a term that works as a vocative. It is intended to:
a) explain a term.
b) call someone.
c) complement the meaning of another term.
d) characterize a word.
Question 4 – In the excerpt “Keep closed.”, the quotation marks highlight an expression:
a) incorrectly written.
b) that generates the humor in the joke.
c) very well known.
d) by someone else.
Question 5 - In “– Impossible, Doctor.”, the period ends a period formed by:
( ) a sentence
( ) a prayer
Per Denyse Lage Fonseca – Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
At answers are in the link above the header.
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