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1501Q860656 | Inglês, Artigos definidos e indefinidos em inglês

Pick the appropriate option:

"He arrived ___ hour ago."

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1502Q848636 | Inglês, Aspectos linguísticos, Professor de Inglês, Prefeitura de Louveira SP, Avança SP, 2020

Find the mistakes and choose the option that best corrects the sentence:


“Many Pirates in the Caribbean Sea was sponsored by foreign goverments who hoped to discrupt the trade empires of Spain and Portugal’’

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1503Q485387 | Inglês, Gramática

Complete the sentences with the correct form of the verbs in the passive voice:

I. The camp __________ by the rain.

II. Tea __________ at 4.

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1504Q932124 | Inglês, Vestibular Primeira Fase USP, USP, FUVEST

Texto associado.
    It’s a perilous time to be a statue. Not that it has ever
been a particularly secure occupation, exposed as statues are to
the elements, bird droppings and political winds.
    Just ask Queen Victoria, whose rounded frame perches
atop hundreds of plinths across the Commonwealth, with an air
of solemn, severe solidity. But in 1963 in Quebec, members of a
separatist paramilitary group stuck dynamite under the dress of
her local statue. It exploded with a force so great that her head
was found 100 yards away.
    Today, the head is on display in a museum,with her body
preserved in a room some miles away. The art historian Vincent
Giguère said that “the fact it’s damaged is what makes it so
important.”
    There’s another reason to conserve the beheaded
Victoria. Statues of women, standing alone and demanding
attention in a public space, are extremely rare.
    To be made a statue, a woman had to be a naked muse,
royalty or the mother of God. Or occasionally, an icon of war,
justice or virtue: Boadicea in her chariot in London, the Statue
of Liberty in New York.
    Still, of 925 public statues in Britain, only 158 are women
standing on their own. Of those, 110 are allegorical or mythical,
and 29 are of Queen Victoria.
                                         Julia Baird, The New York Times. September 4, 2017. Adaptado.
No texto, a figura da rainha Vitória é associada ao conceito de
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1505Q113472 | Inglês, Analista de Finanças e Controle, MF, ESAF

Texto associado.

Read the text below entitled `While Rome burns´ in order to answer questions 22 to 25:

While Rome burns
Source: www.economist.co.uk
Sep 25th, 2008 (Adapted)


American plans to buy up assets that are clogging the fi nancial system lack detail but no one doubts that a massive government intervention is coming. In Europe jittery investors have no such reassurance. European governments have yet to respond publicly to calls from Hank Paulson, the treasury secretary, to follow his lead. They look set to keep faith with the approach that they have used to handle the crisis so far ? staving off liquidity worries by allowing banks to use facilities at central banks to swap their assets in exchange for ready cash. That makes many watchers nervous. The crisis in America has dramatically grown from one of liquidity to one of solvency as well. Lehman Brothers had access to the Federal Reserve´s discount window, after all, but still went under. The burning question now is whether banks have enough capital. On some measures, European banks look pretty well capitalized. The average tier–one ratio, which measures capital based on the riskiness of bank assets, stood at 8% in the fi rst half of the year. That looks solid enough, if you assume that banks have a good handle on risk.

As regards investors in Europe at the moment, they are feeling

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1506Q167002 | Inglês, Interpretação de Textos, Auditor Fiscal do Trabalho, MTE, ESAF

Texto associado.

Companies in the rich world are confronted with a rapidly
ageing workforce. Nearly one in three American workers
will be over 50 by 2012, and America is a young country
compared with Japan and Germany. China is also ageing
rapidly, thanks to its one-child policy. This means that
companies will have to learn how to manage older workers
better.
Most companies are remarkably ill-prepared. There was a
fl icker of interest in the problem a few years ago but it was
snuffed out by the recession. The management literature
on older workers is a mere molehill compared with the
mountain devoted to recruiting and retaining the young.
Companies are still stuck with an antiquated model for
dealing with ageing, which assumes that people should
get pay rises and promotions on the basis of age. They
have dealt with the burdens of this model by periodically
"downsizing" older workers or encouraging them to take
early retirement. This has created a dual labour market for
older workers, of cosseted insiders on the one hand and
unemployed or retired outsiders on the other.
But this model cannot last. The number of young people,
particularly those with valuable science and engineering
skills, is shrinking. And governments are raising retirement
ages and making it more diffi cult for companies to shed
older workers, in a desperate attempt to cope with their
underfunded pension systems.
Feb 4th 2010 | From The Economist print edition [adapted]

In paragraph 2, the author claims that the recent economic recession has

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1507Q931444 | Inglês, Vestibular Primeira Fase USP, USP, FUVEST

Texto associado.

        A study carried out by Lauren Sherman of the University of California and her colleagues investigated how use of the “like” button in social media affects the brains of teenagers lying in body scanners. 

        Thirty-two teens who had Instagram accounts were asked to lie down in a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanner. This let Dr. Sherman monitor their brain activity while they were perusing both their own Instagram photos and photos that they were told had been added by other teenagers in the experiment. In reality, Dr. Sherman had collected all the other photos, which included neutral images of food and friends as well as many depicting risky behaviours like drinking, smoking and drug use, from other peoples’ Instagram accounts. The researchers told participants they were viewing photographs that 50 other teenagers had already seen and endorsed with a “like” in the laboratory. 
        The participants were more likely themselves to “like” photos already depicted as having been “liked” a lot than they were photos depicted with fewer previous “likes”. When she looked at the fMRI results, Dr. Sherman found that activity in the nucleus accumbens, a hub of reward circuitry in the brain, increased with the number of “likes” that a photo had. 
The Economist, June 13, 2016. Adaptado.
 Conforme o texto, a região do cérebro que se mostrou mais ativa, quando da análise dos resultados da ressonância, corresponde a um sistema de
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1508Q932991 | Inglês, UFRGS Vestibular 1 dia UFRGS, UFRGS, UFRGS, 2018

Texto associado.
........ September 11, 2001, at 8:46 A.M., a
hijacked airliner crashed into the north tower
of the World Trade Center in New York. At
9:03 A.M. a second plane crashed into the
south tower. The resulting infernos caused
the buildings to , the south tower
after burning for an hour and two minutes, the
north tower twenty-three minutes after
that. The attacks were masterminded by
Osama bin Laden in an attempt to intimidate
the United States and unite Muslims for a
restoration of the caliphate.
9/11, as the happenings of that day are now
called, has set off debates on a vast array of
topics. But I would like to explore a lesserknown
debate triggered by it. Exactly how
many events took place in New York on that
morning ........ September?
It could be argued that the answer is one.
The attacks on the two buildings were part of
a single plan conceived by one man in service
of a single agenda. They unfolded ........ a few
minutes and yards of each other, targeting
the parts of a complex with a single name,
design, and owner. And they launched a
single chain of military and political events in
their aftermath.
Or it could be argued that the answer is two.
The towers were distinct collections of glass
and steel separated by an expanse of space,
and they were hit at different times and went
out of existence at different times. The
amateur video that showed the second plane
closing in on the south tower as the north
tower billowed with smoke makes the twoness
unmistakable: while one event was frozen in
the past, the other loomed in the future.
The gravity of 9/11 would seem to make this
discussion frivolous to the point of impudence,
a matter of mere "semantics," as we say, with
its implication of splitting hairs. But the
relation of language to our inner and outer
worlds is a matter of intellectual fascination
and real-world importance.
______ "importance" is often hard to
quantify, ........ this case I can put an exact
value on it: 3,5 billion dollars. That was the
sum in a legal dispute for the insurance
payout to Larry Silverstein, the leaseholder of
the World Trade Center site. Silverstein’s
insurance policies stipulated a maximum
reimbursement for each destructive "event."
If 9/11 comprised a single event, he stood to
receive 3,5 billion dollars; if two, he stood to
receive 7 billion. In the trials, the attorneys
disputed the applicable meaning of the term
event. The lawyers for the leaseholder defined
it in physical terms (two s); those for
the insurance companies defined it in mental
terms (one plot). There is nothing "mere"
about semantics!
Adapted from: PINKER, Steven. The Stuff of
Thought . New York: Penguin, 2007. p. 1-2.
Select the alternative that adequately fills in the gap in line 45.
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1510Q705190 | Inglês, Conhecimentos Básicos, CGE CE, CESPE CEBRASPE, 2019

Texto associado.
Text CB1A3-II
1     The Canada Revenue Agency continues to modernize
       its operations and reduce red tape to enhance services to
       Canadians while reducing its overall costs. It is increasingly
4     providing services electronically to make it easier for
       Canadians and businesses to interact with the Agency at the
       lowest possible cost. By simplifying the way it collects taxes
7     and distributes benefit payments, the Agency will ensure
       Canadians and small and medium-sized enterprises receive the
       benefits and credits to which they are entitled as efficiently and
10   quickly as possible. In addition, the Agency will leverage the
       expertise of tax professionals to improve the effectiveness of its
       operations.
Comptroller General of Canada. Archived – Budget 2012 (adapted).

Based on text CB1A3-II, judge the following items.
I The expression “red tape” (R.2) means politically-motivated and inconsistent official procedures.
II The basic meaning conveyed by “to enhance” (R.2) and to leverage (R.10) can also be found in to better.
III To be entitled (R.9) is synonymous with to be eligible for.
IV The word “overall” (R.3) means in general terms in the text.
Decide which alternative below is correct.
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1511Q485567 | Inglês, Gramática, Professor de Língua Inglesa, SEDU ES, FCC

Atenção: As questões de números 47 a 70 referem-se a conhecimentos linguísticos da língua inglesa.

Rafael: I didn?t like the football game.

Claudio: ......

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1512Q848362 | Inglês, Vocabulário, Professor de Educação Básica PEB II Inglês, Avança SP, 2020

Choose the option where both grammar and vocabulary are correct:

I. “When I was a child, I use to play on the streets all day long.”
II. “Eating habits today are worse than they used to be.”
III. “You have soccer practice at 2:00, haven’t you?”
IV. “He suffers from a disease that affects his humor.”
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1514Q229382 | Inglês, Interpretação de Textos, Programador de Computador, TRE RN, FCC

Texto associado.


Technology and legal pressure have changed
spammers’ terms of trade. They long relied on sending
more e-mails from more computers, knowing that some
will get through. But it is hard to send 100m e-mails
without someone noticing. In 2008 researchers from the
University of California at Berkeley and San Diego posed
as spammers, infiltrated a botnet and measured its
success rate. The investigation confirmed only 28 “sales”
on 350m e-mail messages sent, a conversion rate
under .00001%. Since then the numbers have got worse.
But spammers are a creative bunch.
Imagem 001.jpg of tricking
consumers into a purchase, they are stealing their money
directly. Links used to direct the gullible to a site selling
counterfeits. Now they install “Trojan” software that
ransacks hard drives for bank details and the like.
Spammers also have become more sophisticated
about exploiting trust. In few places is it granted more
readily than on social-networking sites. Twitter, a forum for
short, telegram-like messages, estimates that only 1% of
its traffic is spam. But researchers from the University of
California at Berkeley and the University of Illinois at
Champaign-Urbana show that 8% of links published were
shady, with
Imagem 002.jpg of them leading to scams and the rest to
Trojans. Links in Twitter messages, they found, are over
20 times more likely to get clicked than those in e-mail
spam.
Nor is Facebook as safe as it seems. As an
experiment, BitDefender, an online-security firm, set up
fake profiles on the social network and asked strangers to
enter into a digital friendship. They were able to create as
many as 100 new friends a day. Offering a profile picture,
particularly of a pretty woman, increased their odds. When
the firm’s researchers expanded their requests to strangers
who shared even one mutual friend, almost half accepted.
Worse, a quarter of BitDefender’s new friends clicked on
links posted by the firm, even when the destination was
obscured.


(Adapted from http://www.economist.com/node/17519964)

De acordo com o texto,

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1515Q688396 | Inglês, Aluno 2 Dia, Colégio Naval, Marinha, 2019

Texto associado.

Read and complete the sentence below.


I’m traveling to ,______ United States next month. I want to see _____ Hawaii and________ Rocky Mountains (depending on_______money and________time!).


Mark the option which best completes the blanks respectiveiy.
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1516Q860686 | Inglês, Advérbios em inglês

Qual alternativa NÃO é um advérbio de frequência?

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1518Q157496 | Inglês, Oficial da Marinha, ESCOLA NAVAL, EN

Which of the alternatives below completes the sentence correctly?

"There ____________(1) people on the wait list in the past
few years whose interest level was inappropriate, " says Meehan.

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1519Q485689 | Inglês, Gramática, Professor Classe I Nível A, Secretaria de Estado de Educação PA, CONSULPLAN, 2018

Analyse the sentences containing underlined parts to answer 26, 27, 28, 29 and 30.

Mark the item corresponding to the inconsistent underlined part correction.

It’s necessary that your son is present to study sessions to make up for his poor performance in the exam.

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1520Q265543 | Inglês, Vestibular, USP, FUVEST

Texto associado.

Texto para as questões de 38 a 40
 In 1993, the dawn of the Internet age, the liberating anonymity of the online world was captured in a wellknown New Yorker cartoon. One dog, sitting at a computer, tells another: "On the Internet, nobody knows you?re a dog." Fifteen years later, that anonymity is gone.
Technology companies have long used "cookies," little bits of tracking software slipped onto your computer, and other means, to record the Web sites you visit, the ads you click on, even the words you enter in search engines – information that some hold onto forever. They?re not telling you they?re doing it, and they?re not asking permission. Internet service providers (I.S.P.?s) are now getting into the act. Because they control your connection, they can keep track of everything you do online, and there have been reports that I.S.P.?s may have started to sell the information they collect.
The driving force behind this prying is commerce. The big growth area in online advertising right now is "behavioral targeting." Web sites can charge a premium if they are able to tell the maker of an expensive sports car that its ads will appear on Web pages clicked on by upperincome, middle-aged men.
The New York Times, April 5th 2008.
ISP = Provedores de serviço de internet.

As personagens dos quadrinhos, mencionadas no texto, se vangloriam de

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