Portuguese activity, aimed at students in the ninth year of elementary school, addresses the simple guy. When does a subject classify that way? When it has only one head, does it have only one word or only one noun? Let's learn? To do this, answer the questions that refer to the text on the invention of the wristwatch!
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:
Sometimes one discovery leads to another. And that's how Santos Dumont also invented the wristwatch. There was only the pocket watch, but Dumont couldn't reach in his pocket to check the time as he maneuvered the heavy cranks of the 14-Bis. So he thought of a way to tell the time without taking his arm out of the position he used to command the airplane. Thus was born the wristwatch, now used all over the world.
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Question 1 - In the sentence “Sometimes one discovery leads to another.”, the subject is simple because:
( ) has only one core.
( ) has only one word.
( ) has only one noun.
Question 2 - In “[…] Santos Dumont also invented the wristwatch.”, the verb expresses:
( ) a continuous action of the simple subject.
( ) a completed action of the simple subject.
( ) a hypothetical action of the simple subject.
Question 3 - In the phrase “There was only the pocket watch […]”, the subject of the verb “existed” is simple. If it were replaced by the verb “there was”, would the subject's classification be the same? Explain:
A:
Question 4 - In the part “So, he thought of a way […]”, the simple subject was used to:
( ) resume.
( ) advertise.
( ) complementary.
Question 5 - Reread this passage from the text:
“Thus, the wristwatch was born […]”
In this passage of the text, the subject of the verb “born” is:
( ) hidden.
( ) simple.
( ) undetermined.
By Denyse Lage Fonseca
Graduated in Languages and specialist in distance education.
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