Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the ninth year of elementary school, about the Indefinite Pronouns. Are we going to study the pronouns that express indefiniteness? To do this, answer the questions based on the text. January 27 - Speaker's Day!
You can download this Portuguese activity in an editable Word template, ready to print in PDF and also the answered activity.
Download this Portuguese exercise at:
SCHOOL: DATE:
PROF: CLASS:
NAME:
Read:
Speaker is not the guy who prays a lot. It has nothing to do with praying or the clock time. Orator is the one who speaks in public. There are people who, because of their profession, live doing this. If you're not shy, you might find it easy to talk to a crowded audience. But not everyone is like that. Some people's nervousness can be so great that they pass out. Others feel stomachaches, sweat cold, get itchy, have a tantrum… Generally, those who need to speak in public look for professionals such as speech therapists to help. In addition to making the voice prettier, the speech therapist helps the person to feel more secure. There are several types of speaker. There is, for example, the sacred orator, the one who gives sermons, also called the preacher.
Available in: .
Question 1 - The underlined pronoun is undefined in the passage:
( ) “There are people who, because of their profession, live doing that.”
( ) “But not even whole world is like that.”
( ) “[…] that one who delivers sermons, also called a preacher.”
Question 2 - Underline the indefinite pronoun in this period of the text:
"Some people's nervousness can be so great that they pass out."
Question 3 - In the period above, the indefinite underlined pronoun:
( ) explains a noun.
( ) replaces a noun.
( ) accompanies a noun.
Question 4 – In the segment "Others feel a stomachache, sweat cold, get itchy [...]", the indefinite pronoun "Others" refers to:
( ) to the noun “people”.
( ) to the pronoun “they”.
( ) to the noun “professionals”.
Question 5 - In the excerpt “Generally, who needs to speak in public […]”, the “who” is a pronoun:
( ) relative
( ) Undefined
( ) interrogative
By Denyse Lage Fonseca
Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.