Portuguese activity, focused on students in the ninth year of elementary school, addresses the prepositions. Let's analyze the relationships of meaning they establish in the text about the book Pilar's Diary in Africa? To do so, answer the questions proposed below!
You can download this Portuguese language activity in an editable Word template, ready to print in PDF and also the completed activity.
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SCHOOL: DATE:
PROF: CLASS:
NAME:
Read:
In the fight for freedom and against injustice, Pilar and her friends find themselves on the other side of the Atlantic and learn a lot about African culture. Pilar, Breno and the cat Samba embark on the magical net and end up in Africa, where they meet Fummi, a Yoruba princess. Together they will try to save their family and people, captured by slave traders. Traveling from Nigeria to Angola, Pilar and her friends learn a lot about the history of Africa, its animals, and its culture. The four adventurers have the help of an elephant to cross forests, face the rough sea in a small sailboat, gallop in the dangerous savannah riding on a zebra, they ride down the Congo River alongside the powerful Queen Jinga and face the owners of the slave ships.
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Question 1 - The highlighted word is a preposition in the segment:
( ) “In the fight for freedom and against the injustice, Pilar and her friends […] ”
( ) “[…] Where meet Fummi, a Yoruba princess.”
( ) “[…] gallop in the dangerous savanna mounted on one zebra […]"
Question 2 - In the part “[…] learn a lot about African culture.”, the underlined preposition indicates:
( ) cause.
( ) subject matter.
( ) top position.
Question 3 - In “[…] captured by slave traders.”, the preposition “by” comprises:
( ) An object.
( ) a subject.
( ) an agent of the liability.
Question 4 – In the passage “Traveling from Nigeria to Angola […]”, the term “a” is:
( ) a preposition.
( ) a definite article.
( ) an oblique personal pronoun.
Question 5 - In the passage “The four adventurers have the help of an elephant to cross forests […]”, the preposition “to” expresses:
( ) quite.
( ) destiny.
( ) goal.
By Denyse Lage Fonseca
Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
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