Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the eighth year of elementary school, addresses the direct transitive verbs. How about studying them in the text about the book Cora, Coraline Heart? In “[…] she climbed the mountain […]”, is the verb direct transitive because she did not need complement, required complement with preposition or demanded complement without preposition? Let's go to the challenge?
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:
"I am that woman who climbed the mountain of life, removing rocks and planting flowers." Better There is no definition to speak of Ana Lins dos Guimarães Peixoto Bretas, known in Brazilian literature as Cora Coralin. Goiana, at the age of fourteen, began to write her first texts and publish them in her city's newspapers. She also worked as a confectioner, sprinkling sweet, touching words in her verses that move and make you think. And it was at age 75 that she wrote her first book. For her, what counted in life was not the starting point, but the journey. Discover her life story presented by the fruitful partnership between Lúcia Fidalgo and Fabiana Salomão.
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Question 1 - In the sentence “[…] climbed the mountain […]”, the verb is direct transitive because:
( ) dispensed with the complement.
( ) required complement with preposition.
( ) required complement without preposition.
Question 2 - In the excerpt “[…] publish them in your city's newspapers.”, the complement of the direct transitive verb resumes:
Question 3 - In the segment “She also exercised the profession of confectioner […]”, the subject of the direct transitive verb is:
( ) hidden.
( ) nonexistent.
( ) undetermined.
Question 4 – In “[…] sprinkling sweet words in his verses […]”, the direct transitive verb:
( ) is in the infinitive.
( ) is in the gerund.
( ) is in the participle.
Question 5 - In the passage “Know your life story […]”, the direct transitive verb was used in the imperative way to express:
( ) an invitation.
( ) an order.
( ) an advice.
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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