Portuguese activity, aimed at seventh-year students, aims to study the relative pronouns. Shall we identify them? Let's understand the role they play in the communicative context? So, answer the questions based on the text that presents the book. True Classics: Greco-Roman Myths and Legends, written by Ana Maria Machado.
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:
A large part of our culture was born with the Greeks and Romans, who left us an invaluable treasure – myths, legends, fables, tragedies and comedies – whose marks are with us to this day. Here we have gathered some of these stories, which will echo throughout the centuries of our era. Sometimes they look like fairy tales, other times they resemble an adventure movie. They are just a small sample of the richness and variety of what classical literature left us as a legacy. These and many other stories are part of the invaluable heritage of Classical Antiquity. Worth knowing.
Available in: .
question 1 – In the passage “[…] they left us a most valuable treasure […]”, the relative pronoun “that” takes up:
( ) "the Greek"
( ) “the Romans”
( ) “the Greeks and Romans”
Question 2 - Identify the sentence in which the highlighted pronoun is relative:
( ) “[…] whose brands follow us to this day.”
( ) "Sometimes they they look like fairy tales […]"
( ) “These and many other stories are part of the priceless heritage […]"
Question 3 - The relative pronoun, identified in the previous question, establishes a relationship of:
( ) place
( ) possession
( ) time
Question 4 – In the segment “We've gathered here some of these stories, which will leave their echoes […]”, the “what” is:
( ) an adverb
( ) a conjunction
( ) a relative pronoun
Question 5 - In the sentence “This is the book in which Greco-Roman myths and legends are presented!”, a preposition must precede the relative pronoun “that”. Tick it:
( ) "in"
( ) "in"
( ) "with"
By Denyse Lage Fonseca – Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
At answers are in the link above the header.
report this ad