Portuguese activity, aimed at seventh-year students, aims to study the verbs in the future, in a contextualized way. Are we going to test your knowledge of this tense?
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:
There is a lot to be said in favor of the rules; almost the same arguments that can be made about the laws of civil society: an artist who is trained according to these same rules will never produce something absolutely bad; in the same way, whoever regulates himself by the laws and attends to decorum, will never be a very insufferable neighbor nor a determined rogue. However, say whatever you like; rules only serve to destroy the true feeling and expression of nature. No, what I say is not too much; the rules only constrain; they can take away, it's true, something superfluous etc...
Goethe. “The Sufferings of Young Werther,” [letter 8]. May 26th.
Question 1 - “[…] it will never produce something absolutely bad […]”. Identify the verb, used in the future tense, that makes up this part of the text:
A:
Question 2 - The verb in the future, identified above, has as subject:
a) civil society
b) an artist
c) a neighbor
d) a rogue
Question 3 - Mark the passage whose underlined verb was inflected in the future tense:
a) “[…] almost the same arguments as if may do about the laws […]"
b) "However, let it be said that want […]”
c) "No, what I say not too much […]"
d) “[…] they can remove, it is true, something superfluous […]"
Question 4 – In the segment “[…] never it will be a very insufferable neighbor […]”. The highlighted future verb is classified as:
a) indirect transitive verb
b) direct transitive verb
c) intransitive verb
d) connecting verb
Question 5 - The phrase “[…] the rules are only for destroying […]” was correctly written in the future tense of the present in:
a) “[…] the rules only served to destroy […]”
b) “[…] the rules only served to destroy […]”
c) “[…] the rules will only serve to destroy […]”
d) “[…] the rules would only serve to destroy […]”
By Denyse Lage Fonseca – Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
At answers are in the link above the header.
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