Portuguese activity, focused on students in the eighth year of elementary school, addresses the Indefinite Pronouns. Are we going to analyze the pronouns that replace or accompany the nouns, expressing indefiniteness? Then answer the questions based on the text. November 5th – Amateur Radio Day!
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:
Nowadays, you who have a computer with Internet can chat and talk to people who don't you know, they may be thousands of miles away, but they certainly like the same things that you. The chat flows yummy. But, before the popularization of the Internet, the only one who could have this taste was the radio amateur. Radio amateurs don't do this professionally. The name itself is already saying. They are people who use radio communication equipment to talk to other people who use the same equipment. It's the same on the Internet: they have their old acquaintances, they use nicknames, but they also always look for someone new who is listening on the same frequency to talk. They are often the only way to send or receive distress messages from inaccessible places. You can ask an old radio amateur how many times he has picked up calls for help from planes and boats on the high seas.
Available in: .
Question 1 - The highlighted pronoun is undefined in the excerpt:
( ) “The radio amateurs do not that professionally."
( ) “[…] others people who use the same equipment.”
( ) “[…] they they have their old acquaintances […]"
Question 2 - In the text, the indefinite pronoun "who" works syntactically as:
( ) subject.
( ) direct object.
( ) indirect object.
Question 3 - Highlight the indefinite pronoun in this passage of the text:
“[…] but they are also always looking for someone new who is listening […]”
Question 4 – The indefinite pronoun highlighted above:
( ) is invariant.
( ) varies in gender.
( ) varies in number.
Question 5 - In "[…] how many times he has already received requests for help […]”, the term underlined is:
( ) a relative pronoun.
( ) an indefinite pronoun.
( ) an adverb of intensity.
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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