Início

Questões de Concursos Língua Inglesa

Resolva questões de Língua Inglesa comentadas com gabarito, online ou em PDF, revisando rapidamente e fixando o conteúdo de forma prática.


191Q1033495 | Raciocínio Lógico, Lógica de Argumentação, Língua Inglesa, SEE PB, IDECAN, 2025

A loja da dona Kamylla organizou um momento de técnicas de vendas com uma empresa de consultoria estratégica. Em determinado momento, a consultora fez a seguinte declaração:

“Aumentando os investimentos em mídias sociais, então as vendas crescerão. E, caso as vendas cresçam, poderemos contratar novos colaboradores. De fato, aumentaremos os investimentos em mídias sociais.”

Através da lógica dedutiva, podemos concluir que
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

192Q947010 | Química, Soluções características, Língua Inglesa, UEG, UEG, 2019

Líquidos de arrefecimento são utilizados para melhorar o sistema de refrigeração dos motores dos carros. Geralmente são soluções aquosas de etilenoglicol, um diol, de fórmula molecular C2H6O2 e massa molar 62,1 g/mol. O rótulo de uma determinada marca de líquido de arrefecimento indica que há 50% de etilenoglicol em massa, o que corresponde a 530 g por litro de solução. A concentração dessa solução aquosa de etilenoglicol, em mol/L, é aproximadamente:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

193Q1024579 | Inglês, Tradução Translation, Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Catuípe RS, OBJETIVA, 2024

Alguns erros de tradução ocorrem devido aos chamados “false friends”. Sendo assim, assinalar a alternativa em que a tradução para a língua portuguesa está CORRETA:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

194Q908881 | Inglês, Verbos Verbs, Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Taquaruçu do Sul RS, FUNDATEC, 2024

Texto associado.

Village’s Amateur Archaeologists Find Lost Tudor Palace


  1. When a group of amateur archaeologists set out to find the buried remains of a Tudor palace
  2. in their Northamptonshire village five years ago, they knew the odds were against them. “Many
  3. of us were brought up in the village, and you hear about this lost palace, and wonder whether
  4. it’s a myth or real. So we just wanted to find it”, said Chris Close, the chair of the Collyweston
  5. Historical and Preservation Society (Chaps) which made the discovery of the Palace of
  6. Collyweston in a back garden this year. “But we’re a bunch of amateurs. We had no money, no
  7. expertise, no plans, no artist impressions to go off, and nothing remaining of the palace. It was
  8. naivety and just hard work that has led us to it”.
  9. The site was found using geophysical surveys and ground-penetrating radar. Various
  10. attempts had been made in the 1980s and 90s to find Collyweston Palace, the home of Henry
  11. VII’s mother, Lady Margaret Beaufort. However, without the advantage of modern technology,
  12. none had succeeded. The palace was famous during the 15th century and several historic events
  13. took place there. The pre-wedding celebrations of Margaret Tudor to James IV of Scotland in
  14. 1503 took place in the palace, and Henry VIII is recorded as holding court there on 16 and 17
  15. October 1541. By the mid-17th century, it had fallen into disrepair, and until the Chaps dig
  16. uncovered the palace walls in March, there was very little remaining evidence of its existence.
  17. “A number of things have only really come to light as we’ve done this project”, said Close.
  18. “As you do more and more research, and various different records start to become unearthed,
  19. we realized Collyweston had privy councils being run from here, which is of massive national
  20. importance”. Historians from the University of York helped verify the group’s findings and identify
  21. the palace through some uncovered stone moldings, and will work with Chaps on more
  22. excavations to further reveal the structure and conserve it for the future.
  23. The Chaps team, which comprises more than 80 members ranging from teenagers to people
  24. in their 70s and 80s, first set out their plan to find the palace in March 2018, using “local folktales
  25. and hearsay” to help refine their search area. They carried out geophysical surveys and used
  26. ground-penetrating radar (GPR) to help reveal the location of the palace walls, before securing
  27. permission from homeowners to excavate in gardens. “We’ve done it all on an absolute
  28. shoestring”, said Close. “We’ve basically done an £80,000-£90,000 project for roughly £13,000.
  29. For us, being a little society, to have achieved this with no money, or expertise, or plans, I think
  30. it’s something that the whole society should be proud of”.

(Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/science/2023/dec/06/tudor-collyweston-palace-northamptonshire-found-in-garden-by-amateur-archeologists - text especially adapted for this test).

The sentence “Many of us were brought up in the village” (l. 02-03) is in the simple past and passive voice. Which sentence below is also an example of a simple past passive structure?

  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

195Q903020 | Inglês, Determinantes e quantificadores Determiners and quantifiers, Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Ubajara CE, CETREDE, 2024

Analyze the sentences below.

I. Carla always pretends to care.
II. I can’t stand his comments, they’re full of all types of prejudice.
III. It’s an important topic to discuss.
IV. How much times do we have to go over this project?

Mark these statements as True (T) or False (F).
( ) “Care” and “stand” are regular verbs in sentences I and II, respectively.
( ) “Go over” is a phrasal verb in sentence IV.
( ) Even though “pretend”, “important” and “prejudice” are similar in spelling to words in Portuguese, they are all false cognates.
( ) In sentences II and IV, the use of quantifiers is correct.


The statements are, in the order presented, respectively:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

196Q1023421 | Inglês, Tag Questions, Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Passos MG, Instituto Access, 2023

Texto associado.
11.30.2023

City lawmakers in Brazil have enacted what appears to be the nation’s first legislation written entirely by artificial intelligence (AI) — even if they didn’t know it at the time.

The experimental ordinance was passed in October in the southern city of Porto Alegre and city councilman Ramiro Rosário revealed that it was written by a chatbot, sparking objections and raising questions about the role of artificial intelligence in public policy.

Rosário told The Associated Press that he asked OpenAI’s chatbot ChatGPT to craft a proposal to prevent the city from charging taxpayers to replace water consumption meters if they are stolen. He then presented it to his 35 peers on the council without making a single change or even letting them know about its unprecedented origin. The 36-member council approved it unanimously and the ordinance went into effect on Nov. 23.

The arrival of ChatGPT on the marketplace just a year ago has sparked a global debate on the impacts of potentially revolutionary AI-powered chatbots. While some see it as a promising tool, it has also caused concerns and anxiety about the unintended or undesired impacts of a machine handling tasks currently performed by humans.

Porto Alegre, with a population of 1.3 million, is the second-largest city in Brazil’s south. The city’s council president, Hamilton Sossmeier, found out that Rosário had enlisted ChatGPT to write the proposal when the councilman bragged about the achievement on social media. Sossmeier initially told local media he thought it was a “dangerous precedent.”

The AI large language models that power chatbots like ChatGPT work by repeatedly trying to guess the next word in a sentence and are prone to making up false information, a phenomenon sometimes called hallucination.

All chatbots sometimes introduce false information when summarizing a document, ranging from about 3% of the time for the most advanced GPT model to a rate of about 27% for one of Google’s models, according to recently published research by the tech company Vectara.

In an article published on the website of Harvard Law School’s Center of Legal Profession earlier this year, Andrew Perlman, wrote that ChatGPT “is a machine learning system, it may not have the same level of understanding and judgment as a human lawyer when it comes to interpreting legal principles and precedent. This could lead to problems in situations where a more in-depth legal analysis is required”.

There was no such transparency for Rosário’s proposal in Porto Alegre. Sossmeier said Rosário did not inform fellow council members that ChatGPT had written the proposal.

Rosário told the AP his objective was also to spark a debate. He said he entered a 49-word prompt into ChatGPT and it returned the full draft proposal within seconds, including justifications.

And the council president, who initially decried the method, already appears to have been swayed. “I changed my mind,” Sossmeier said. “I started to read more in depth and saw that, unfortunately or fortunately, this is going to be a trend.”


( (<https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/11/30/brazil-artificial-intelligenceporto-alegre/9f576ecc-8fb2-11ee-95e1-edd75d825df0_story.htm>(adapted))
Choose the best alternative: “The 36-member council approved the proposal, _____?”
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

197Q1004547 | Linguística, Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Cubatão SP, IBAM, 2024

A abordagem proposta por Rajagopalan em Por uma linguística crítica (2000) estabelece conexões entre linguagem, ideologia e poder. Sobre os fundamentos dessa perspectiva, assinale a alternativa que melhor reflete os conceitos centrais da obra.
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

198Q1033497 | Raciocínio Lógico, Diagramas de Venn Conjuntos, Língua Inglesa, SEE PB, IDECAN, 2025

Uma escola de ensino médio realizou uma pesquisa com 400 alunos para obter dados em relação a hábitos de estudos em inglês para duas modalidades: virtual e presencial. A pesquisa identificou que: (i) 240 alunos estão matriculados na modalidade virtual; (ii) 200 na presencial; e (iii) 80 em ambas as modalidades. Com base nessas informações, o número de estudantes que não estudam em nenhuma dessas modalidades é
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

199Q946507 | Inglês, Língua Inglesa, UECE, UECE CEV, 2019

Texto associado.

T E X T


I Used to Fear Being a Nobody. Then I Left

Social Media.


By Bianca Brooks


“What’s happening?”

I stare blankly at the little box as I try to think of something clever for my first tweet. I settle on what’s at the top of my mind: “My only #fear is being a nobody.” How could I know this exchange would begin a dialogue that would continue nearly every day for the next nine years of my life?

I began using Twitter in 2010 as a newly minted high school freshman. Though it began as a hub for my quirky adolescent thoughts, over the years it became an archive of my emotional and intellectual voice — a kind of virtual display for the evolution of my politics and artistic identity. Butafter nine years, it was time to close the archive. My wanting to share my every waking thought became eclipsed by a desire for an increasingly rare commodity — a private life.

Though I thought disappearing from social media would be as simple as logging off, my refusal to post anything caused a bit of a stir among my small but loyal following. I began to receive emails from strangers asking me where I had gone and when I would return. One message read: “Not to be over familiar, but you have to come back eventually. You’re a writer after all. How will we read your writing?” Another follower inquired, “Where will you go?”

The truth is I have not gone anywhere. I am, in fact, more present than ever

Over time, I have begun to sense these messages reveal more than a lack of respect for privacy. I realize that to many millennials, a life without a social media presence is not simply a private life; it is no life at all: We possess a widespread, genuine fear of obscurity.

When I consider the near-decade I have spent on social media, this worry makes sense. As with many in my generation, Twitter was my entry into conversations happening on a global scale; long before my byline graced any publication, tweeting was how I felt a part of the world. Twitter functions much like an echo chamber dependent on likes and retweets, and gaining notoriety is as easy as finding someone to agree with you. For years I poured my opinions, musings and outrage onto my timeline, believing I held an indispensable place in a vital sociopolitical experiment.

But these passionate, public observations were born of more than just a desire to speak my mind — I was measuring my individual worth in constant visibility. Implicit in my follower’s question “Where will you go?” is the resounding question “How will we know where you’ve gone?” Privacy is considered a small exchange for the security of being well known and well liked.

After all, a private life boasts no location markers or story updates. The idea that the happenings of our lives would be constrained to our immediate families, friends and real-life communities is akin to social death in a world measured by followers, views, likes and shares.

I grow weary when I think of this as the new normal for what is considered to be a fruitful personal life. Social media is no longer a mere public extension of our private socialization; it has become a replacement for it. What happens to our humanity when we relegate our real lives to props for the performance of our virtual ones?

For one, a predominantly online existence can lull us into a dubious sense of having enacted concrete change, simply because of a tweet or Instagram post. As “hashtag activism” has obscured longstanding traditions of assembly and protest, there’s concern that a failure to transition from the keyboard to in-person organization will effectively stall or kill the momentum of political movements. (See: Occupy Wall Street.)

The sanctity of our most intimate experiences is also diminished. My grandfather Charles Shaw — a notable musician whose wisdoms and jazz scene tales I often shared on Twitter — passed away last year. Rather than take adequate time to privately mourn the loss of his giant influence in my life alongside those who loved him most, I quickly posted a lengthy tribute to him to my followers. At the time I thought, “How will they remember him if I don’t acknowledge his passing?”

Perhaps at the root of this anxiety over being forgotten is an urgent question of how one ought to form a legacy; with the rise of automation, a widening wealth gap and an unstable political climate, it is easy to feel unimportant. It is almost as if the world is too big and we are much too small to excel in it in any meaningful way. We feel we need as many people as possible to witness our lives, so as not to be left out of a story that is being written too fast by people much more significant than ourselves.

“The secret of a full life is to live and relate to others as if they might not be there tomorrow, as if you might not be there tomorrow,” the writer Anais Nin said. “This feeling has become a rarity, and rarer every day now that we have reached a hastier and more superficial rhythm, now that we believe we are in touch with a greater amount of people. This is the illusion which might cheat us of being in touch deeply with the one breathing next to us.”

I think of those words and at once any fear of obscurity is eclipsed by much deeper ones — the fear of forgoing the sacred moments of life, of never learning to be completely alone, of not bearing witness to the incredible lives of those who surround me.

I observe the world around me. It is big and moving fast. “What’s happening?” I think to myself.

I’m just beginning to find out.


From:www.nytimes.com/Oct. 1, 2019

The author states that people are so much into social media that it has
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

200Q946511 | Inglês, Língua Inglesa, UECE, UECE CEV, 2019

Texto associado.

T E X T


I Used to Fear Being a Nobody. Then I Left

Social Media.


By Bianca Brooks


“What’s happening?”

I stare blankly at the little box as I try to think of something clever for my first tweet. I settle on what’s at the top of my mind: “My only #fear is being a nobody.” How could I know this exchange would begin a dialogue that would continue nearly every day for the next nine years of my life?

I began using Twitter in 2010 as a newly minted high school freshman. Though it began as a hub for my quirky adolescent thoughts, over the years it became an archive of my emotional and intellectual voice — a kind of virtual display for the evolution of my politics and artistic identity. Butafter nine years, it was time to close the archive. My wanting to share my every waking thought became eclipsed by a desire for an increasingly rare commodity — a private life.

Though I thought disappearing from social media would be as simple as logging off, my refusal to post anything caused a bit of a stir among my small but loyal following. I began to receive emails from strangers asking me where I had gone and when I would return. One message read: “Not to be over familiar, but you have to come back eventually. You’re a writer after all. How will we read your writing?” Another follower inquired, “Where will you go?”

The truth is I have not gone anywhere. I am, in fact, more present than ever

Over time, I have begun to sense these messages reveal more than a lack of respect for privacy. I realize that to many millennials, a life without a social media presence is not simply a private life; it is no life at all: We possess a widespread, genuine fear of obscurity.

When I consider the near-decade I have spent on social media, this worry makes sense. As with many in my generation, Twitter was my entry into conversations happening on a global scale; long before my byline graced any publication, tweeting was how I felt a part of the world. Twitter functions much like an echo chamber dependent on likes and retweets, and gaining notoriety is as easy as finding someone to agree with you. For years I poured my opinions, musings and outrage onto my timeline, believing I held an indispensable place in a vital sociopolitical experiment.

But these passionate, public observations were born of more than just a desire to speak my mind — I was measuring my individual worth in constant visibility. Implicit in my follower’s question “Where will you go?” is the resounding question “How will we know where you’ve gone?” Privacy is considered a small exchange for the security of being well known and well liked.

After all, a private life boasts no location markers or story updates. The idea that the happenings of our lives would be constrained to our immediate families, friends and real-life communities is akin to social death in a world measured by followers, views, likes and shares.

I grow weary when I think of this as the new normal for what is considered to be a fruitful personal life. Social media is no longer a mere public extension of our private socialization; it has become a replacement for it. What happens to our humanity when we relegate our real lives to props for the performance of our virtual ones?

For one, a predominantly online existence can lull us into a dubious sense of having enacted concrete change, simply because of a tweet or Instagram post. As “hashtag activism” has obscured longstanding traditions of assembly and protest, there’s concern that a failure to transition from the keyboard to in-person organization will effectively stall or kill the momentum of political movements. (See: Occupy Wall Street.)

The sanctity of our most intimate experiences is also diminished. My grandfather Charles Shaw — a notable musician whose wisdoms and jazz scene tales I often shared on Twitter — passed away last year. Rather than take adequate time to privately mourn the loss of his giant influence in my life alongside those who loved him most, I quickly posted a lengthy tribute to him to my followers. At the time I thought, “How will they remember him if I don’t acknowledge his passing?”

Perhaps at the root of this anxiety over being forgotten is an urgent question of how one ought to form a legacy; with the rise of automation, a widening wealth gap and an unstable political climate, it is easy to feel unimportant. It is almost as if the world is too big and we are much too small to excel in it in any meaningful way. We feel we need as many people as possible to witness our lives, so as not to be left out of a story that is being written too fast by people much more significant than ourselves.

“The secret of a full life is to live and relate to others as if they might not be there tomorrow, as if you might not be there tomorrow,” the writer Anais Nin said. “This feeling has become a rarity, and rarer every day now that we have reached a hastier and more superficial rhythm, now that we believe we are in touch with a greater amount of people. This is the illusion which might cheat us of being in touch deeply with the one breathing next to us.”

I think of those words and at once any fear of obscurity is eclipsed by much deeper ones — the fear of forgoing the sacred moments of life, of never learning to be completely alone, of not bearing witness to the incredible lives of those who surround me.

I observe the world around me. It is big and moving fast. “What’s happening?” I think to myself.

I’m just beginning to find out.


From:www.nytimes.com/Oct. 1, 2019

As a concluding note, the author acknowledges that, after leaving social media, she
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

201Q948841 | Português, Interpretação de Textos, Língua Inglesa, UEG, UEG, 2017

Texto associado.

O mundo como pode ser: uma outra globalização


Podemos pensar na construção de um outro mundo a partir de uma globalização mais humana. As bases materiais do período atual são, entre outras, a unicidade da técnica, a convergência dos momentos e o conhecimento do planeta. É nessas bases técnicas que o grande capital se apoia para construir uma globalização perversa. Mas essas mesmas bases técnicas poderão servir a outros objetivos, se forem postas a serviço de outros fundamentos sociais e políticos. Parece que as condições históricas do fim do século XX apontavam para esta última possibilidade. Tais novas condições tanto se dão no plano empírico quanto no plano teórico.

Considerando o que atualmente se verifica no plano empírico, podemos, em primeiro lugar, reconhecer um certo número de fatos novos indicativos da emergência de uma nova história. O primeiro desses fenômenos é a enorme mistura de povos, raças, culturas, gostos, em todos os continentes. A isso se acrescente, graças ao progresso da informação, a “mistura” de filosofia, em detrimento do racionalismo europeu. Um outro dado de nossa era, indicativo da possibilidade de mudanças, é a produção de uma população aglomerada em áreas cada vez menores, o que permite um ainda maior dinamismo àquela mistura entre pessoas e filosofias. As massas, de que falava Ortega y Gasset na primeira metade do século (A rebelião das massas, 1937), ganham uma nova qualidade em virtude de sua aglomeração exponencial e de sua diversificação. Trata-se da existência de uma verdadeira sociodiversidade, historicamente muito mais significativa que a própria biodiversidade. Junte-se a esses fatos a emergência de uma cultura popular que se serve dos meios técnicos antes exclusivos da cultura de massas, permitindo-lhe exercer sobre esta última uma verdadeira revanche ou vingança.

É sobre tais alicerces que se edifica o discurso da escassez, afinal descoberta pelas massas. A população, aglomerada em poucos pontos da superfície da Terra, constitui uma das bases de reconstrução e de sobrevivência das relações locais, abrindo a possiblidade de utilização, ao serviço dos homens, do sistema técnico atual.

No plano teórico, o que verificamos é a possiblidade de produção de um novo discurso, de uma nova metanarrativa, um grande relato. Esse novo discurso ganha relevância pelo fato de que, pela primeira vez na história do homem, se pode constatar a existência de uma universalidade empírica. A universalidade deixa de ser apenas uma elaboração abstrata na mente dos filósofos para resultar da experiência ordinária de cada pessoa. De tal modo, em mundo datado como o nosso, a explicação do acontecer pode ser feita a partir de categorias de uma história concreta. É isso, também, que permite conhecer as possiblidade existentes e escrever uma nova história.

SANTOS, Milton. Por uma outra globalização. 13. ed. São Paulo: Record, 2006. p. 20-21. (Adaptado).

Analisando-se aspectos linguísticos e estruturais do texto, constata-se que
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

202Q947060 | Matemática, Porcentagem, Língua Inglesa, UEG, UEG, 2018

Em um jogo de futebol, um jogador chuta uma bola parada, que descreve uma parábola até cair novamente no gramado. Sabendo-se que a parábola é descrita pela função y = 20x - x2 , a altura máxima atingida pela bola é
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

203Q948853 | História e Geografia de Estados e Municípios, Língua Inglesa, UEG, UEG, 2017

Leia o texto a seguir.

Para justificar a ambição grega de hegemonia universal, Aristóteles (384 - 322 a. C.) formulou a hipótese de que certas raças são, por natureza, livres desde o berço, enquanto outras são escravas.

COMAS, Juan. Os mitos raciais. Raça e Ciência. São Paulo: Perspectiva, 1960. v. I. p. 13.

Essa filosofia racial foi incorporada às campanhas militares de um grande general e líder político que foi aluno de Aristóteles. Seu nome era

  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

204Q1023418 | Inglês, Caso Genitivo Genitive Case, Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Passos MG, Instituto Access, 2023

Texto associado.
11.30.2023

City lawmakers in Brazil have enacted what appears to be the nation’s first legislation written entirely by artificial intelligence (AI) — even if they didn’t know it at the time.

The experimental ordinance was passed in October in the southern city of Porto Alegre and city councilman Ramiro Rosário revealed that it was written by a chatbot, sparking objections and raising questions about the role of artificial intelligence in public policy.

Rosário told The Associated Press that he asked OpenAI’s chatbot ChatGPT to craft a proposal to prevent the city from charging taxpayers to replace water consumption meters if they are stolen. He then presented it to his 35 peers on the council without making a single change or even letting them know about its unprecedented origin. The 36-member council approved it unanimously and the ordinance went into effect on Nov. 23.

The arrival of ChatGPT on the marketplace just a year ago has sparked a global debate on the impacts of potentially revolutionary AI-powered chatbots. While some see it as a promising tool, it has also caused concerns and anxiety about the unintended or undesired impacts of a machine handling tasks currently performed by humans.

Porto Alegre, with a population of 1.3 million, is the second-largest city in Brazil’s south. The city’s council president, Hamilton Sossmeier, found out that Rosário had enlisted ChatGPT to write the proposal when the councilman bragged about the achievement on social media. Sossmeier initially told local media he thought it was a “dangerous precedent.”

The AI large language models that power chatbots like ChatGPT work by repeatedly trying to guess the next word in a sentence and are prone to making up false information, a phenomenon sometimes called hallucination.

All chatbots sometimes introduce false information when summarizing a document, ranging from about 3% of the time for the most advanced GPT model to a rate of about 27% for one of Google’s models, according to recently published research by the tech company Vectara.

In an article published on the website of Harvard Law School’s Center of Legal Profession earlier this year, Andrew Perlman, wrote that ChatGPT “is a machine learning system, it may not have the same level of understanding and judgment as a human lawyer when it comes to interpreting legal principles and precedent. This could lead to problems in situations where a more in-depth legal analysis is required”.

There was no such transparency for Rosário’s proposal in Porto Alegre. Sossmeier said Rosário did not inform fellow council members that ChatGPT had written the proposal.

Rosário told the AP his objective was also to spark a debate. He said he entered a 49-word prompt into ChatGPT and it returned the full draft proposal within seconds, including justifications.

And the council president, who initially decried the method, already appears to have been swayed. “I changed my mind,” Sossmeier said. “I started to read more in depth and saw that, unfortunately or fortunately, this is going to be a trend.”


( (<https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/11/30/brazil-artificial-intelligenceporto-alegre/9f576ecc-8fb2-11ee-95e1-edd75d825df0_story.htm>(adapted))
According to text, Andrew Perlman wrote that ChatGPT “is a machine learning system, it may not have the same level of understanding and judgment as a human lawyer when it comes to interpreting legal principles and precedent. This could lead to problems in situations where a more in-depth legal analysis is required”, it is possible to say that
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

205Q948183 | Matemática, Áreas e Perímetros, Língua Inglesa, IF Sul RioGrandense, INEP, 2018

Sabendo que f(x)= 2xe g(x) = 2 -x, considere as afirmações abaixo.

I - f(x) + g(x)≥ 2, para todo número real.

II - f(x) + g(x) = f(-x) + g(-x), para todo x número real.

III- se , então x>y, então g(x) > g(y).

Assinale a alternativa correta.

  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

206Q948193 | História, Primeira Guerra Mundial, Língua Inglesa, IF Sul RioGrandense, INEP, 2018

Entre 1791 e 1804, uma das colônias francesas no Novo Mundo, Saint Domingue (Haiti), passou por um processo marcado pela reação contra a dominação de uma elite branca que resultou na sua independência e na abolição da escravidão.

Sobre este fato, é correto afirmar.

I - A chegada de Napoleão Bonaparte ao poder foi um grande estímulo aos revoltosos, pois o novo governo da França aboliu definitivamente a escravidão em todos os domínios franceses nas Américas (1802).
II - A eliminação dos dominadores brancos e o protagonismo de escravos, libertos e quilombolas foi motivo de grande preocupação entre as sociedades escravistas das Américas. Temia-se a “haitinização”, ou seja, que a revolta se espalhasse e colocasse em xeque a manutenção da instituição escravista em toda a região.
III - A Revolução do Haiti foi um dos inúmeros casos nas Américas em que o rompimento do domínio colonial esteve associado à abolição da escravidão.
IV - Após unir-se aos revolucionários, entre 1794 e 1802, o liberto François Dominique Toussaint (“Toussaint L’Ouv rtur ”) foi a principal autoridade da ilha. Depois da sua captura e deportação para a França, o exescravo Jean-Jacques Dessalines assumiu a liderança dos revoltosos que proclamaram a Independência do Haiti em 1804.

Quais estão corretas?
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

207Q1004554 | Pedagogia, Teorias do desenvolvimento e da aprendizagem, Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Cubatão SP, IBAM, 2024

Leia o excerto abaixo:

A obra Atividade social nas aulas de língua estrangeira (2009) de LIBERALI aborda como as atividades sociais nas aulas de língua estrangeira podem ser pensadas como práticas que vão além do ensino técnico da língua, promovendo a interação e a transformação do aprendiz. Baseada na teoria de _________, a autora propõe que a aprendizagem ocorre por meio de interação social e da mediação, destacando que o aprendizado não é individual, mas sim uma construção coletiva. A linguagem, nesse contexto, assume um papel central como mediadora de experiências.

Complete a lacuna corretamente e assinale a alternativa correta.
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

208Q1023001 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Caucaia CE, Fundação CETREDE, 2024

Texto associado.
The Impact of Globali-zation: Opportunities and Challenges

In today’s interconnected world, the concept of globalization plays a significant role. Globalization refers to the increased interconnectedness of people, cultures, economies, and nations across the globe. It has been driven by advances in technology, trade, and communication, making the world a smaller and more interdependent place.
One of the most noticeable aspects of globalization is the rise of multinational corporations. Companies like Apple, Google, and Coca-Cola have a global presence and impact. They operate in multiple countries, manufacture products in one part of the world, and sell them in another. This has led to greater access to goods and services for consumers worldwide but has also raised questions about economic inequality and exploitation.
Globalization has also transformed the way we communicate. Social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram have connected people from different corners of the world. Information and news now travel at lightning speed, influencing public opinion and shaping global events. However, this instant connectivity has also brought concerns about privacy, misinformation, and cyberbullying.
The impact of globalization is evident in culture and lifestyle as well. The exchange of music, movies, and fashion trends between countries has created a global pop culture. People can enjoy sushi in New York, listen to K-pop in Brazil, or watch Hollywood movies in India. While this cultural exchange can be enriching, it has also led to fears of cultural homogenization and the loss of local traditions.
In conclusion, globalization has profoundly affected our world in various ways, from economics to culture to communication. It has opened up opportunities and posed challenges that societies must address in our interconnected global community.

FONTE: Adapted from: https://www.techtarget.com/searchcio/definition/ globalization. Accessed on October 10, 2023.
According to the text, how have social media platforms impacted globalization?
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

210Q947013 | História, República Oligárquica, Língua Inglesa, UEG, UEG, 2019

Leia o texto a seguir.

Análises recentes das sucessões presidenciais na Primeira República (1889-1930) mostram que a famosa aliança entre Minas Gerais e São Paulo, chamada de política do “café-com-leite”, não controlou de forma exclusiva o regime republicano. Havia outros quatro estados, pelo menos, com acentuada importância no cenário político: Rio Grande do Sul, Rio de Janeiro, Bahia e Pernambuco.

VISCARDI, C. M. R. Aliança café com política. Revista Nossa História. São Paulo, ano 2, n. 19, p. 37, maio 2005.

O questionamento da chamada “política do café-com leite” foi decisivo para a eclosão da

  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️
Utilizamos cookies e tecnologias semelhantes para aprimorar sua experiência de navegação. Política de Privacidade.