Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the eighth year of elementary school, explores the accessory terms of prayer. Let's study them in the text the kasha? Do you know what this is? No? So, read the text to find out and then answer the proposed questions!
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:
Kasha, a Russian dish par excellence, is a porridge or porridge, made from buckwheat or other cereals such as oatmeal (boiled in water or milk and seasoned with salt or sugar, butter, crackling, fried onion etc.). This dish has been part of the Russian diet for centuries. In the country, there is an old saying: "Cabbage soup and kasha, that's all we need to live." But today's Russians would probably include bread as well – each Russian citizen eats on average around sixty kilograms of bread a year!
Andrea Curtis. Snack time: what children eat in schools in different countries. São Paulo: Panda Books, 2015.
Question 1 - Identify the part of the text that defines the "kasha":
A.
Question 2 - The part, identified above, is called:
( ) bet
( ) vocative
( ) predicative of the subject
Question 3 – In the passage "In the country, there is an old saying that goes […]”, the highlighted adverbial adjunct points to a place. Identify it:
A.
Question 4 - In the period “This dish has been part of the Russian diet for centuries.”, the adjunct “this” was used to:
( ) retrieve information.
( ) announce information.
( ) explain information.
Question 5 - The adverbial adjunct "probably" indicates:
( ) a statement
( ) a doubt
( ) a conclusion
Question 6 – Underline the adjuncts that make up this text fragment:
“[…] each Russian citizen eats on average around sixty kilos of bread a year!”
Per Denyse Lage Fonseca – Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
At answers are in the link above the header.