Portuguese activity, aimed at sixth year students, proposes the study of punctuation marks. Are we going to learn how to use them correctly? After all, punctuation makes all the difference in writing texts, doesn't it? So, answer the questions about the text Berto, who is an abominable snowman!
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:
Berto was an abominable man from the Snows. He liked the snowy mountains as much as the distant forests.
One day, Berto was chasing two butterflies when they landed on a rock.
Silently, he crept closer to them. But on the other side of the rock was a little boy.
What a fright! He had never seen anything like it! Berto dove into the bush to hide. But… YYYYYYY! The branches had many thorns!
The little boy walked up to Berto:
“Excuse me,” he said. I didn't mean to scare him. My name is Tom. Who are you
– I am Berto, an abominable snowman!
BUCKINGHAM, M. "The not so abominable Snowman." São Paulo: Ciranda Cultural, 2005. s/p.
Question 1 - In the passage “Silently, he crept close to them.”, the comma separates a word indicating:
( ) the way Berto crawled.
( ) the place where Berto crawled.
( ) the time with which Berto crawled.
Question 2 - The exclamation point accompanies the interjection “[…] AAAAIIII!” which expresses:
( ) amazement
( ) ache
( ) am sorry
Question 3 - The sentence "Who are you" must end with:
( ) ellipsis
( ) end
( ) Question Mark
Question 4 – In the excerpt “– Sorry […]”, the dash introduces a line:
( ) by the man from Neves, Berto.
( ) of the little boy Tom.
( ) of the narrator of the story.
Question 5 - Cite the punctuation marks present in the text:
A.
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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