Portuguese activity, recommended to eighth grade students, aims to study the compound subject. When is a subject composed? Find out by answering the questions based on the text about bois-bumbá, Caprichoso and Garantido, from the traditional Festival de Parintins! Come on guys?
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:
Artists, seamstresses, welders and designers handle iron, wood, Styrofoam and fabric. In the shed of the Garantido ox, the one with the red heart, everyone works hard (they never use the verb to care for) to prepare a spectacle that surpasses the rival's. Last year, Caprichoso, the one with the blue star, won the bois-bumbá contest at the famous Festival de Parintins, which every end of June attracts around 100,000 people to the sweet island located on the right bank of the river Amazons. In the corral of the capricious crowd, “allegorists”, dancers and percussionists prefer not to say that a new victory is guaranteed. They say, yes, in all letters, that it is assured.
POMPEU, Fernanda. “Tasty and guaranteed”.
Question 1 - Identify, by means of a line, the subject composed in the fragment that introduces the text above:
"Artists, seamstresses, welders and designers handle iron, wood, Styrofoam and fabric."
Question 2 - The verb, present in the fragment above, expresses:
( ) an action of the compound subject.
( ) a state of the compound subject.
( ) a characteristic of the composite subject.
Question 3 - There is a compound subject in the passage:
( ) “[…] everyone takes care (never use the verb to care for) to prepare a show […]”
( ) “[…] dancers and percussionists prefer not to say that a new victory is guaranteed.”
( ) "They say, yes, in all letters, that it is assured."
Question 4 – In the passage noted above, the subject is composed because:
( ) has more than one core.
( ) has more than one word.
( ) has more than one noun.
Question 5 - In the phrase “Caprichoso and Guaranteed stir the Festival of Parintis!”, the nuclei of the composite subject are:
( ) the adjectives “Caprichoso” and “Guaranteed”.
( ) the verbs “Caprichoso” and “Guaranteed”.
( ) the nouns “Caprichoso” and “Guaranteed”.
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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