Portuguese activity, aimed at ninth grade students, aims to study the conjunctions. Let's find them and analyze the ideas they indicate in the curious text Lightning can happen on other planets? For this, answer the proposed questions that explore various conjunctions!
This Portuguese language activity is available for download in an editable Word template, ready to print in PDF and also the completed activity.
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Spacecraft have shown that Earth is not the only planet where lightning strikes. In 1979, the Voyager 2 spacecraft observed lightning on Jupiter and in 2004 the Cassini spacecraft observed lightning on Saturn. In both cases, the lightning strikes seem to be far more intense than those on Earth. There is evidence that there are lightnings on Uranus and Neptune.
Apparently, two conditions must be satisfied for lightning to occur in other planetary atmospheres: the existence of particles of different types or with different properties (such as temperature), so that opposite charges can accumulate on different particles, and significant spatial separation between these particles. loaded.
Other places in the solar system may contain lightning, such as Venus and the Io satellites (the most internal Jupiter) and Triton (Saturn's largest satellite), although conclusive evidence remains to be seen. It is also speculated that lightning may have occurred in Mars' remote past, associated with volcanic eruptions. Perhaps the study of lightning in radically different atmospheres, such as these planets, can help us better understand the consequences of their existence on our planet.
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Question 1 - Identify the passage where a conjunction indicates a comparison:
a) "Spaceships have shown that Earth is not the only planet where lightning strikes."
b) “[…] the lightning seems to be much more intense than those on Earth.”
c) "There is evidence that there are lightnings on Uranus and Neptune."
d) “Other places in the solar system may contain lightning, such as Venus and the satellites […]”
Question 2 - In the excerpt “[…] the existence of particles of different types or with different properties […]”, a word performs the function of conjunction. Tick it:
a) "a"
b) "of"
c) "or"
d) "with"
Question 3 - Highlight the conjunction that makes up this fragment of the text:
“[…] two conditions must be satisfied for lightning to occur in other planetary atmospheres […]”
The underlined conjunction introduces:
a) a caveat
b) a condition
c) an explanation
d) a purpose
question 4 – In the segment “[…] so that opposite charges can be accumulated on different particles […]”, the conjunction “so that” could be replaced by:
a) as soon as
b) since
c) luckily
d) as long as
Question 5 - In “[…] although there is still no conclusive evidence.”, the conjunction “although” points to a fact that:
a) is added to another.
b) is the cause of another.
c) conforms to another.
d) grants itself in opposition to another.
Question 6 – Taking into account the function identified above, the conjunction "although" is classified as:
a) causal
b) concessive
c) conformative
d) adversative
Question 7 – The highlighted term is an additive conjunction in the sentence:
The) "[…] and significant spatial separation between these charged particles.”
b) “[…] (the satellite more internal Jupiter) […]"
c) "It is speculated also that lightning may have occurred […]"
d) “[…] in radically different atmospheres, like of these planets […]"
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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