Breakdown of A exposição literária termina amanhã.
Questions & Answers about A exposição literária termina amanhã.
Why is there a definite article A before exposição?
In Portuguese, we normally use definite articles before common nouns. Exposição is a feminine noun, so it takes the feminine singular article a. Without it, the sentence would sound incomplete in standard speech:
– A exposição literária termina amanhã.
Why is the adjective literária placed after the noun exposição?
What person, number and tense is the verb termina?
The verb is in the present tense—how can it refer to “tomorrow”?
What part of speech is amanhã, and why isn’t there a preposition like “em”?
amanhã is an adverb of time. Such adverbs usually stand alone and don’t require a preposition:
– A exposição termina amanhã.
Can I omit the article and say Exposição literária termina amanhã?
Could I also say A exposição literária vai terminar amanhã to talk about the future?
Yes. Using the periphrastic future with ir + infinitive is common and clear:
– vai terminar amanhã = “is going to end tomorrow” or “will end tomorrow.”
Why does exposição have a ç and a tilde on the ã, and why is there an accent on the i in literária?
– The ç (c-cedilla) signals an /s/ sound before a/o/u (otherwise c would be /k/).
– The tilde in ã marks a nasal vowel and shows that the stress falls on that syllable (ex-po-si-ÇÃO).
– In literária, the acute accent on í indicates both the stressed syllable (li-te-RÍ-a) and that a and i form two separate syllables (a hiatus), preventing them from merging into a diphthong.
More from this lesson
Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor
Start learning PortugueseMaster Portuguese — from A exposição literária termina amanhã to fluency
All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods.
- ✓ Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
- ✓ Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
- ✓ Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
- ✓ AI tutor to answer your grammar questions