Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the seventh year of elementary school, aims to study the adverbs. The proposed questions are based on the text. the former film club, written by João Gilberto Noll.
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:
That slightly cross-eyed man, sporting a greater bad mood than he could really dedicate to anyone who crossed his path and who was now entering the cinema, on a Monday afternoon, to watching a movie not so expected, except among dripping movie lovers from the most exotic cantons, that man, yes, sat in the waiting room and cried, just that: cried. They came to bring him a glass of water right away, someone sat beside him and asked him if he was not feeling well, but he he said nothing, growled, ran his nostrils down his sleeve, jumped up and watched the best movie in months, just that. When leaving the cinema, it rained. He stayed under the awning, waiting for the dry spell. So engrossed in the film that he forgot himself. And I didn't know how to go back.
Joao Gilberto Noll.
Question 1 - The highlighted term works as an adverb in:
( ) "That man quite squinting […]"
( ) “[…] sporting a bad greater mood […]"
( ) “[…] and watched the best film in many months […]"
Question 2 - In the text above, the adverb "simply" modifies the meaning of the verb:
( ) "to watch".
( ) "sat down".
( ) “he cried”.
Question 3 - The circumstance expressed by the underlined adverb was correctly identified in:
( ) "[…] is that now entered the cinema […]” (sure)
( ) “[…] and asked him if it wouldn't pass good […]” (mode)
( ) “And I didn't know more return." (intensity)
Question 4 – In the passage "So absorbed in the film that he forgot himself.”, the term underlined works as an adverb, which intensifies the meaning of:
( ) an adverb
( ) an adjective
( ) a verb
Question 5 - In the excerpt “[…] Canton cinema lovers the more exotic […]”, the adverb “more” expresses:
( ) intensity
( ) addition
( ) mode
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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