Breakdown of A turma estuda de manhã para o exame.
Questions & Answers about A turma estuda de manhã para o exame.
Why is A turma used instead of just turma without an article?
Why do we use the simple present estuda instead of a continuous form like “está estudando”?
What does de manhã mean, and can I change its position?
De manhã means “in the morning.” It’s an adverbial phrase built with de + time-of-day. You can put it:
• After the verb (default): A turma estuda de manhã…
• At the start: De manhã, a turma estuda…
Both are correct; the difference is just emphasis or style.
Why para o exame? Could I say por or drop the article?
We use para to express purpose or goal (“in order to”). Estudar para o exame = “study for the exam.”
• Por would signal cause, exchange or duration, not purpose.
• You can’t drop the article before exame here, because you’re referring to a specific exam. If it were “an exam” in general, you’d say para um exame.
Why is the verb estuda singular? Isn’t turma a group of people?
Why don’t we see a subject pronoun like ela or eles before estuda?
What’s the difference between turma and classe?
Could I move para o exame to the front of the sentence?
Yes. Portuguese word order is relatively flexible with adverbials or purpose phrases. You can say:
“Para o exame, a turma estuda de manhã.”
This fronting places emphasis on the reason (the exam).
More from this lesson
Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor
Start learning PortugueseMaster Portuguese — from A turma estuda de manhã para o exame 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