(UFRGS -2000) Shakespeare in Love is a witty, sexy and merrily literate delight, with an enormously clever premise that only gets better as the film 1funfolds. The screenplay, originating as Marc Normans brainstorm and turned by Tom Stoppard 2into a 3razor-sharp dialogue reminiscent of his Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, dares to imagine 4whatever it likes about the link between Shakespeares artistic passions and his mad yearning for a certain aristocratic beauty. Meanwhile, this 5tirelessly inventive comedy envisions an Elizabethan theatre filled with the same backbiting and conniving we enjoy today and has great fun presenting the creation of Romeo and Juliet problems and all. Fonte: New York Times, March 1999 The verb which can be classified both as a FULL VERB and a MODAL is:
(UFRGS -2000) In Victorian England, the valet, the masters personal servant, had much prestige within the household. First, he had to have, clean and repaired, the correct outfit for every occasion, to attend to his masters toilette (perhaps using his own recipe for shaving soap or boot polishing) including the ironing of shoelaces and the washing of small 1change. The valet travelledeverywhere of 2consequence with his master, deciphering train timetables and taking charge of valuables and cash, and he was 3privy to many close-kept secrets. Abroad he acted as courier and interpreter, and might well have more contacts and knowledge of foreign ways than his master. He needed 4to be fit, for he rose before his master and could not sleep until long after he had retired. Fonte: Pitkin Guides, 1998 The ING forms that have, in the text, the function of nouns are