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5581Q1024723 | Inglês, Verbos Verbs, Língua Inglesa, SEE PB, IDECAN, 2025

Mark the sentence that correctly explains the use of modal verbs.
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

5582Q1023194 | Inglês, Ensino da Língua Estrangeira Inglesa, Professor de Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Santa Leopoldina ES, IDCAP, 2024

A primeira língua franca de que se tem conhecimento é do século XVII, utilizada na região do Mediterrâneo devido à necessidade de comunicação para o comércio na região. Atualmente, o contexto sociolinguístico mundial apresenta a língua inglesa como língua franca, e esta aparece de forma linguística e culturalmente diversa. Com o acesso às novas tecnologias, o inglês se tornou a língua escolhida para aflorar em primeiro plano em muitas das atividades da sociedade atual. Sobre adefinição do Inglês como Língua Franca (ILF), assinale a alternativa CORRETA.
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

5583Q1047002 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Cadete do Exército, ESCOLA NAVAL, Marinha

Which alternative does not express the same idea as "Always do right" in the sentence below?

"Always do right. This will gratify people and astonish the rest" (Mark Twain)
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

5584Q1022685 | Inglês, Pronomes Pronouns, Inglês, Prefeitura de Ribeiro Gonçalves PI, JVL Concursos, 2025

Which sentence accurately uses a reflexive pronoun?
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

5585Q1024478 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Estivador, OGMO Paranaguá PR, IDCAP, 2024

Texto associado.
O texto seguinte servirá de base para responder à questão.


Ship carrying explosive fertiliser heads to UK waters


A Maltese-flagged cargo ship carrying thousands of tonnes of potentially explosive fertiliser is set to travel through UK waters.

Ruby, which was earlier accompanied by an escort tug, has reportedly been rejected by several countries due to its cargo.

The ship, which has 20,000 tonnes of ammonium nitrate on board, was previously damaged but deemed seaworthy by authorities in Norway.

HM Coastguard is in contact with the vessel, which according to ship tracking data, was in the North Sea off the Kent coast on Thursday morning.

The ship, owned by Maltese firm Ruby Enterprise, set off from the northern Russian port of Kandalaksha in July.

The national maritime emergency service said it will monitor the ship's progress as it heads towards and through UK waters.

Vessels are not required to ask permission to travel through UK territorial waters for legitimate purposes.

An escorting tug, Amber II, which had sailed with the boat from Norway, left the Ruby on Thursday morning and sailed east. Its current destination is listed as Rotterdam, in the Netherlands.

Though there is no suggestion of immediate danger from the cargo, the same chemical caused a devastating blast at a Beirut warehouse in 2020.

Ammonium nitrate is regularly transported around the world and used as fertiliser but is also used in explosives.

The ship is carrying seven times the amount of ammonium nitrate that caused the Beirut explosion.

Ruby's location on Thursday, according to Marine Traffic. Marine Traffic data suggested the ship was in the North Sea on Thursday.

Soon after departing Russia, the Ruby briefly ran aground after reportedly encountering a storm.

It then continued its journey around the Kola Peninsula and docked in Tromsø, Norway.

Norway's Maritime Authority told the BBC the vessel was inspected by DNV Group to ensure it met safety and environmental standards.

The group found damage to its hull, propeller and rudder, but the Ruby was still deemed "seaworthy".

As a precaution, DNV Group, and the Maltese flag registry, insisted that a tug escort the vessel for the remainder of its journey.

The ship was bound for Klaipeda, in Lithuania, according to ship tracking firm MarineTraffic.

But despite being deemed seaworthy, the ship was denied entry to Klaipeda. Algia Latakas, the port authority's chief executive, told the BBC that this was "because of its cargo".

Andrea Sella, professor of chemistry at University College London, said the cargo was not high risk, unless there was a fire on board.

"While I understand the caution of the authorities in Troms, I suspect that the chances of a similar disaster to Beirut are relatively modest," she said.

She added: "It would also be interesting to know what the nature of the repairs might be as clearly welding might significantly raise the potential fire risk."

Other reports suggested Sweden had imposed a ban as well, but Sweden's transport agency denies this.

"What the Swedish authorities did was to follow the matter in case we would have needed to act in some way," a spokesperson told the BBC.

In recent weeks, the Ruby travelled south along Norway's coast and through the North Sea.

The ship reportedly has had restricted manoeuvrability, though the BBC has been unable to confirm this.

On 25 September, it anchored about 15 miles (25km) north east of Margate, in Kent, near the Dover Strait - one of the world's busiest waterways.

The Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) said the vessel is "currently securely anchored outside UK territorial waters waiting for appropriate conditions to refuel at sea before passing through the English Channel".

Refuelling at sea is a common practice and will take place in accordance with safety procedures and in favourable weather, said the MCA.

Its current destination is listed as Marsaxlokk, in Malta.

But Maltese authorities have told local media that the ship can only enter the country if it empties its cargo beforehand.

Marco Forgione, director general of the Chartered Institute of Export & International Trade, raised concerns about potential "environmental damage".

"Should the ammonium nitrate start to leak out of the ship and contaminate the sea... shipping through the channel would have to be diverted to avoid further shifting the pollution through its waters," he said.

He added that damage as a result of the potential scenario would be "immense" and cause "ongoing disruption".

The vessel has appropriate safety certificates approved by the vessel's flag state and is able to make its own way, said the MCA.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c62g95721leo

Why was the ship Ruby initially escorted by a tug?
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

5586Q1021663 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Professor de Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Alpestre RS, FUNDATEC, 2024

Texto associado.

FlexSea’s biodegradable plastics attract £3m investment

01 FlexSea, a startup with its roots at Imperial College London, has announced the completion

02 of a seed round worth £3 million in equity and grants. The investment will help the company

03 commercialize a range of sustainable packaging solutions it has developed, based on plastics

04 derived from seaweed. The aim is to address the catastrophic impact of conventional plastics

05 on the environment, in particular the single-use plastic products that persist in the ocean for

06 many hundreds of years after they are discarded. In contrast, the biodegradable plastics

07 devised by FlexSea will break down in the sea or the soil within a matter of weeks.

08 Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea, first started to think about

09 biodegradable plastics during the COVID pandemic. “I noticed the amount of plastic packaging

10 that was piling up at home, because of the online groceries and other deliveries we relied on

11 at the time, and I just had enough,” he says. He started looking into the biodegradable plastics

12 that were already available, and found that they often had shortcomings. Some didn’t actually

13 break down very rapidly under day-to-day environmental conditions, while others involved

14 unsustainable production methods. For example, plastics derived from seaweed are often made

15 from brown seaweed, which is usually harvested from nature, rather than the commonly

16 cultivated red seaweed. He set out to develop a thin-film plastic from red seaweed. “By the

17 end of lockdown I had the first prototype, a transparent flexi-film, and that is still the backbone

18 technology of our solvent-cast thin films,” he says.

19 FlexSea was set up in 2021 with co-founder Thibaut Monfort-Micheo. Their first home was

20 at Scale Space, on the White City Campus, and they received support from across Imperial's

21 enterprising ecosystem. In 2021 they joined the Centre for Climate Change Innovation’s

22 Greenhouse Accelerator, and in 2022 they took part in Imperial’s Venture Catalyst Challenge,

23 winning the energy and environment track. "FlexSea has the potential to change the pattern

24 of human consumption of plastic and therefore change the sustainability path of our planet,”

25 says Stephan Morais, Managing General Partner of lead investor Indico Capital. "This

26 investment will allow us ___ (make) significant progress and penetrate the market effectively,”

27 says Carlo Fedeli, the co-founder and Chief Executive of FlexSea.

(Available at: www.imperial.ac.uk/news/248154/flexseas-biodegradable-plastics-attract-3m-investment/ – text especially adapted for this test).

In the excerpt “By the end of lockdown I had the first prototype” (l. 16-17), the underlined structure suggests that the prototype was developed:

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

5587Q1021919 | Inglês, Pronomes Pronouns, Inglês, Prefeitura de Cubati PB, CONTEMAX, 2024

Choose the sentence that correctly uses a relative clause:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

5588Q949985 | Inglês, Terceira Etapa, UNICENTRO, UNICENTRO

Texto associado.

How World Leaders Reacted to Trump at the U.N.

By SOMINI SENGUPTA and MEGAN SPECIA SEPT. 23, 2017


He was called a “giant gold Goliath” and a “rogue newcomer.” But in a few corners the remarks made by President Trump at the United Nations were described as “courageous” and “gratifying.”

Throughout the week, Mr. Trump’s first address to the General Assembly drew many direct and indirect swipes, from allies and rivals alike, and sparse support.

While the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un, attacked Mr. Trump from afar — calling him a “dotard” in a statement on North Korean national television — others used their platforms at the United Nations to respond.

Some leaders were more subtle than others.

Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s 93-year-old president, took aim at Mr. Trump during his own speech on Thursday. Mr. Mugabe mocked Mr. Trump as a “giant gold Goliath” and said other nations were “embarrassed if not frightened” by his statements about North Korea.

“Are we having a return of Goliath to our midst, who threatens the extinction of other countries?” Mr. Mugabe asked. Some responded with applause to his reference to the biblical character who threatened the Israelites before being slain by the young shepherd David, who would become king.

Mr. Mugabe then went on to address Mr. Trump directly, telling him to “blow your trumpet in a musical way towards the values of unity, peace, cooperation, togetherness and dialogue which we have always stood for.”

During his speech, Mr. Trump notably omitted any talk of climate change, seen as one of the most pressing issues for many world leaders.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada received the longest applause during his General Assembly speech on Thursday after an implicit dig at Mr. Trump.

“There is no country on the planet that can walk away from the challenge and reality of climate change,” Mr. Trudeau said, referring to Mr. Trump’s plans to pull out of the Paris climate accord.


(Adapted from https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/23/world/americas/world-leaders-trump-un.html?mcubz=0)

According to the text:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

5589Q1024481 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Estivador, OGMO Paranaguá PR, IDCAP, 2024

Texto associado.
O texto seguinte servirá de base para responder à questão.


Ship carrying explosive fertiliser heads to UK waters


A Maltese-flagged cargo ship carrying thousands of tonnes of potentially explosive fertiliser is set to travel through UK waters.

Ruby, which was earlier accompanied by an escort tug, has reportedly been rejected by several countries due to its cargo.

The ship, which has 20,000 tonnes of ammonium nitrate on board, was previously damaged but deemed seaworthy by authorities in Norway.

HM Coastguard is in contact with the vessel, which according to ship tracking data, was in the North Sea off the Kent coast on Thursday morning.

The ship, owned by Maltese firm Ruby Enterprise, set off from the northern Russian port of Kandalaksha in July.

The national maritime emergency service said it will monitor the ship's progress as it heads towards and through UK waters.

Vessels are not required to ask permission to travel through UK territorial waters for legitimate purposes.

An escorting tug, Amber II, which had sailed with the boat from Norway, left the Ruby on Thursday morning and sailed east. Its current destination is listed as Rotterdam, in the Netherlands.

Though there is no suggestion of immediate danger from the cargo, the same chemical caused a devastating blast at a Beirut warehouse in 2020.

Ammonium nitrate is regularly transported around the world and used as fertiliser but is also used in explosives.

The ship is carrying seven times the amount of ammonium nitrate that caused the Beirut explosion.

Ruby's location on Thursday, according to Marine Traffic. Marine Traffic data suggested the ship was in the North Sea on Thursday.

Soon after departing Russia, the Ruby briefly ran aground after reportedly encountering a storm.

It then continued its journey around the Kola Peninsula and docked in Tromsø, Norway.

Norway's Maritime Authority told the BBC the vessel was inspected by DNV Group to ensure it met safety and environmental standards.

The group found damage to its hull, propeller and rudder, but the Ruby was still deemed "seaworthy".

As a precaution, DNV Group, and the Maltese flag registry, insisted that a tug escort the vessel for the remainder of its journey.

The ship was bound for Klaipeda, in Lithuania, according to ship tracking firm MarineTraffic.

But despite being deemed seaworthy, the ship was denied entry to Klaipeda. Algia Latakas, the port authority's chief executive, told the BBC that this was "because of its cargo".

Andrea Sella, professor of chemistry at University College London, said the cargo was not high risk, unless there was a fire on board.

"While I understand the caution of the authorities in Troms, I suspect that the chances of a similar disaster to Beirut are relatively modest," she said.

She added: "It would also be interesting to know what the nature of the repairs might be as clearly welding might significantly raise the potential fire risk."

Other reports suggested Sweden had imposed a ban as well, but Sweden's transport agency denies this.

"What the Swedish authorities did was to follow the matter in case we would have needed to act in some way," a spokesperson told the BBC.

In recent weeks, the Ruby travelled south along Norway's coast and through the North Sea.

The ship reportedly has had restricted manoeuvrability, though the BBC has been unable to confirm this.

On 25 September, it anchored about 15 miles (25km) north east of Margate, in Kent, near the Dover Strait - one of the world's busiest waterways.

The Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) said the vessel is "currently securely anchored outside UK territorial waters waiting for appropriate conditions to refuel at sea before passing through the English Channel".

Refuelling at sea is a common practice and will take place in accordance with safety procedures and in favourable weather, said the MCA.

Its current destination is listed as Marsaxlokk, in Malta.

But Maltese authorities have told local media that the ship can only enter the country if it empties its cargo beforehand.

Marco Forgione, director general of the Chartered Institute of Export & International Trade, raised concerns about potential "environmental damage".

"Should the ammonium nitrate start to leak out of the ship and contaminate the sea... shipping through the channel would have to be diverted to avoid further shifting the pollution through its waters," he said.

He added that damage as a result of the potential scenario would be "immense" and cause "ongoing disruption".

The vessel has appropriate safety certificates approved by the vessel's flag state and is able to make its own way, said the MCA.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c62g95721leo

What caused the authorities in Klaipeda, Lithuania, to deny entry to the Ruby?
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

5590Q1024230 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Anos Iniciais e Finais, InoversaSul, Unesc, 2025

During his vacation in Italy, Mark visited a famous novel written about in a guidebook. To his surprise, it was not a piece of literature but a historic building that locals referred to as "novel" because of its unique and innovative design for its time. Mark found the story behind the structure fascinating and spent hours exploring it.
In the text above, the word novel is used in different contexts. Based on the context, choose the correct alternative about the meaning of the term.
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

5591Q1022183 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Professor de Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Luiz Alves SC, UNIVALI, 2024

Texto associado.
O texto seguinte servirá de base para responder à questão.


Fossils show flying reptiles ate squid and fish

Prehistoric flying reptiles lived on a diet of small fish and squid, the latest scientific research has shown.

Researcher Dr Roy Smith said stomach contents discovered in fossils were the "smoking gun" evidence for the diets.

The findings were made by scientists from the University of Portsmouth and the Staatliches Museum fur Naturkunde Stuttgart in Germany and published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

Pterosaurs lived 182 million years ago and had wingspans of up to 12m (39ft).

The team analysed the fossilised stomach contents of two pterosaur species, dorygnathus and campylognathoides.

They lived during the early Jurassic period, and were found in modern-day south-west Germany.

They found that dorygnathus ate small fish for its last meal while campylognathoides ate prehistoric squid.

Dr Smith, from Portsmouth University's School of Environment and Life Sciences, said: "It is incredibly rare to find 180 million-year-old pterosaurs preserved with their stomach contents, and provides 'smoking gun' evidence for pterosaur diets.

"The discovery offers a unique and fascinating glimpse into how these ancient creatures lived, what they ate, and the ecosystems they thrived in millions of years ago."

Dr Samuel Cooper, also from the University of Portsmouth, said the stomach contents told scientists "how the animals interacted with each other".

He added: "For me, this evidence of squid remains in the stomach of campylognathoides is therefore particularly exciting.

"Until now, we tended to assume that it fed on fish, similar to dorygnathus, in which we found small fish bones as stomach contents.

"The fact that these two pterosaur species ate different prey shows that they were likely specialised for different diets.

"This allowed dorygnathus and campylognathoides to coexist in the same habitat without much competition for food between the two species."


https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2ym7zedrno
In the text, the phrase "smoking gun" evidence is used to describe the fossil findings. Which of the following best explains the meaning of "smoking gun" in this context?
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

5592Q1023722 | Inglês, Verbos Verbs, Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Anajás PA, Instituto Ágata, 2024

Look at some of the song’s verses Return to Sender, by Elvis Presley, and mark the alternative that presents the verb in the infinitive and its respective forms in the past and the participle of the underlined verb.
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️
  5. ✂️

5593Q1022187 | Inglês, Ensino da Língua Estrangeira Inglesa, Professor de Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Luiz Alves SC, UNIVALI, 2024

The Anglo-Saxon period in English literature, spanning from the 5th to the 11th centuries, produced foundational works with themes of heroism, fate, and the struggle for survival. Which of the following works is considered a central piece of Anglo-Saxon literature and is known for its portrayal of a hero's battle against monsters?
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

5594Q1021935 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Letras, Prefeitura de Novo Mundo MT, Gama Consult, 2024

Texto associado.
What the Paris Olympics opening ceremony really meant

The opening ceremony of the Olympic Games traditionally offers the host city the opportunity to celebrate sporting excellence and international unity while also presenting to the world a flattering portrait of its own nation, informed by its own culture. [...]

[...] Entitled ‘Ça ira’ (‘It’ll be all right’), the show garnered mixed reviews in the French press. It was described variously as magical or catastrophic, as an astonishing apotheosis or a distressing accumulation of kitsch. Lady Gaga performed up and down a flight of stairs, dressed in feathers. The French singer Philippe Katerine, covered in blue body paint and dressed up as Bacchus, reclined in a platter of fruit. A threesome blossomed in the Bibliothèque Nationale. Decapitated figures of Marie-Antoinette holding their singing heads appeared at the windows of the Conciergerie. A floating piano was set on fire. The ceremony was conceived over two years by a committee made up of historian Patrick Boucheron (a member of the prestigious research institute, the Collège de France), the scriptwriter Fanny Herrero (creator of the Netflix series 10 Pour Cent/Call My Agent), the novelist Leïla Slimani (winner of the Goncourt literary prize for her novel Chanson douce/Lullaby), and the dramatist Damien Gabriac, who were all assembled in 2022 by the event’s master of ceremonies, theatre director Thomas Jolly. to co-write the script of their celebration of France.

[...]

The man behind Le Puy du Fou is entrepreneur and politician Philippe de Villiers. Although de Villiers briefly served as Secretary of State for Culture under Socialist President François Mitterand, he is currently a member of French nationalist party Reconquête!, whose leader is the far-right firebrand Eric Zemmour. De Villiers is a Christian traditionalist who has expressed hostility towards Islam and has maintained that during the French Revolution a political ‘genocide’ was perpetrated against the Royalist people of Vendée.

It was therefore important for Jolly and his team firmly to distance their own project from Le Puy du Fou and to offer instead, as Jolly said: ‘the opposite of a virile, heroic and providential history’, of ‘an ode to grandeur’ or to the ‘manifestation of force’. Besides de Villiers’ theme park, another anti-model may have been the opening ceremony of the 2023 Rugby World Cup. Hosted by the popular actor Jean Dujardin and featuring a playful celebration of traditional French life, it was criticised for portraying a nostalgic and ‘rancid’ version of France. To be sure, at a time when France is politically and culturally riven, it would have seemed important to tell a national story that would unite rather than divide. In contrast, Jolly aimed for a celebration of ‘planetary multi-ethnicity’. But was it not in hindsight a mistake, a missed opportunity, to throw out, for fear that it might be politically toxic, anything that might be perceived as a celebration of French history, or the shared heritage that binds all French people together?

Patrick Boucheron, the historian in Jolly’s team, has declared his ‘resistance’ to the idea of a ‘roman national’, the strengthening story a nation collectively weaves about itself – the word roman meaning in this instance at once a narrative and a romance. Boucheron favours instead a decentring of national consciousness and a deconstruction of national history. There was always a danger in rejecting historical greatness for ideological reasons. Louis XIV and Napoleon Bonaparte – both absent from the celebration – really do belong to all French; including them in the narrative would not have made it reactionary. Meanwhile Jolly’s desire systematically to foreground pop culture in order not to appear elitist often felt parochial. What is the long-term cultural significance of Nicky Doll, Paloma and Piche, stars of the reality show Drag Race France? Was the performance of John Lennon’s song Imagine really, as a sports historian declared in thenewspaper Libération, ‘heavy with meaning’ because of its nature as a ‘political and cultural allegory’?

Wasn’t it also a pity not to celebrate France’s contemporary achievements, especially the rebuilding of Notre-Dame after its devastation by fire, and the Grand Paris Express transport network being developed for better integration of central Paris and its banlieues?

But above all, what was missing from the show, with rare exceptions – such as the sight of the Olympic cauldron rising into the sky tethered to a gigantic hot air balloon – was beauty. This signalled a lack of cultural confidence on the part of the ceremony’s storytellers. It was telling, for example, that Marcel Proust, one of France’s most exceptional writers, was featured as a caricatured carnival head, alongside Little Red Riding Hood and Marcel Marceau. Nor was placing the ceremony under the auspices of ‘Ça ira’, a 1790 anthem of the French Revolution as familiar to the French as the Marseillaise, an expression of intellectual confidence. Like the Marseillaise, ‘Ça ira’ is a call to violence – an ode to the systematic hanging of aristocrats from lamp-posts – and insisting, as Jolly did, that it can be reframed as a message of hope and of ‘union and unity within diversity’ is meaningless.

Ultimately, whether any of this landed with its audience remains doubtful. In spite of the driving rain, the French enjoyed the show’s wackiness, the party atmosphere, the excitement and anticipation of the Games. And the Games themselves were a wonderful success. But a message was sent nevertheless. And now that the Olympic truce is over, Emmanuel Macron must once again face up to a divided nation


In: https://engelsbergideas.com/notebook/what-the-paris-olympics-openingceremony-reallymeant/?gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAjwuMC2BhA7EiwAmJKRrLbi3d14OiB6WRug_hjU2I-75FCfTsQ0RitnqNM3GJxOqz9UCUlUBoCZ4IQAvD_BwE
De acordo com o texto, uma das críticas feitas à cerimônia de abertura das Olimpíadas de Paris foi:
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

5595Q1024752 | Inglês, Interpretação de Texto Reading Comprehension, Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Itumbiara GO, IV UFG, 2025

Texto associado.
Texto 6

Fernanda Torres' Speech at Golden Globe Awards

"My God! I didn't prepare anything, because I was glad already and this is such an amazing year for female perfomances. So many actresses here that I admire so much. And, of course, I wanna thank you, Walter Salles, my partner, my friend. What a story, Walter! And, of course, I want to dedicate it to my mother.

You have no idea. She was here 25 years ago and this is like a proof that art can endure through life even in difficult moments, like this amazing Eunice Paiva, that I do, has passed. And the same thing that is happening now in the world, with so much fear and this is a film that helped us to think how to survive in tough times like these.

So, to my mother, to my family, to Andrucha (Waddington), to Selton (Mello), to my kids, to everybody. Thank you very much. Golden Globe. Michael Barker, Mara, so many people. Thank you very much. Thank you!"


Disponível em: <https://www.englishexperts.com.br/forum/fernandatorres-speech-at-golden-globe-awards-t79137.html>. Acesso em: 23 jan.
2025. [Adaptado].
Considering the linguistic elements in the text,
  1. ✂️
  2. ✂️
  3. ✂️
  4. ✂️

5596Q1047280 | Inglês, Pronomes Pronouns, Cadete do Exército, ESCOLA NAVAL, Marinha

Texto associado.
Based on the text below, answer question.

Life in the Navy - Frequently Asked Questions.

Many of your questions about the Navy have been askedand answered before. See if you can find your question inthe list below. Or, to get the most complete picture of theNavy, locate your nearest recruiter and set up a meeting.

(I) ________

It depends. Normally ships will go to sea for 10 daysto 2 weeks each month for training operations. Extendedoperations away from home port can last up to 6 months, andships deploy every 18-24 months. This varies depending onthe mission and type of ship. Ships on 6-month deploymentsspend time visiting ports throughout the world. If you areon a shore duty tour, you will likely spend no time at seaduring the course of the duty assignment {usually 2 to 3years).

(II) _______

There are plenty of activities available to sailors intheir off-duty time. Depending on the size of the ship,you'll have areas for exercise, watching movies, playingcards, emailing friends, and purchasing snacks and otheritems. Many ships also provide college classes.

(III) _______

The tempo of operations will dictate actual length.While in home port or on shore duty, it is very similar tothat of civilian jobs. While out to sea, it is often longerbecause of the workload needed to keep the ship, aircraftand other machinery working properly and efficiently.

(IV) _______

Onder normal circumstances, you will be eligible for apromotion from E-l to E-2 in 9 months, from E-2 to E-3 in 9months, and from E-3 to E-4 in 6 months. Advancements on thebasis of merit can occur in basic training to E-2 withoutwaiting the 9 months. By referring friends who join theNavy, you can be promoted even faster!

(V) _______

Once you have completed basic training and any followupschooling, you will probably move just once to your firstpermanent duty station. Naturally, if you stay in the Navypast your first enlistment (or if you request a specificdeployment) you may have to move again.

(Adapted from https://www.navy.eom/faq.html#section-4)
The following headings have been removed from the text and replaced by (I), (II), (III), (IV) and (V). Number them to indicate the correct order and choose the corresponding option.
( ) What things are there for me to do on a ship?
( ) How often will I have to live in another place? ( ) How long is the normal workday? ( ) How much time will I spend at sea? ( ) What is the career plan like?
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5597Q1022195 | Inglês, Ensino da Língua Estrangeira Inglesa, Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Morungaba SP, Avança SP, 2025

In an interactive lesson, the teacher uses gestures and asks students to act out certain words. For instance, students hop when they hear "rabbit" and roar when they hear "lion." What teaching method is being applied?
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5598Q1024755 | Inglês, Verbos Verbs, Professor II de Língua Inglesa, Prefeitura de Japaratinga AL, IGEDUC, 2025

Which of the following sentences contains a subject-verb agreement error?
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5599Q1047284 | Inglês, Vocabulário Vocabulary, Cadete do Exército, ESCOLA NAVAL, Marinha

Texto associado.
Based on the text below, answer question.

How to Become a USNA Midshipman

Posted by: Jacqui Murray j December 8, 2010There are lots of how-to books on getting in the NavalAcademy, but they1re quite dry and impersonal. Mine -Buildinq a Midshipman - is from the perspective of a womanwho did it (my daughter!) and how she accomplished such alofty goal. It's down-to-earth and should give confidence toany teen, male or female, considering a military academy astheir college of choice.
I wrote this because there was a need for a book likethis. When my daughter wanted a step-by-step on how to getinto the Naval Academy, ali she could find were books thattold her how hard it was, how selective they were, how veryfew could achieve it. My daughter brushed the negativityoff, but I wondered how many kids were discouraged by thatapproach.
I decided to write a book (a) explaining how to achievethe goal, not why kids couldnTt; (b) showing how teens cansolve the problems that stand in their way rather than whythey can't, and (c) sharing the many but predictable stepsthat will take a motivated, committed applicant where theywant to go rather than why they can't get there.That approach worked for my daughter and I had no doubtit would work for others. From what I hear from readers,it1s true. I hope you find it useful. .

(MURRAY, Jacqui. Building a USNA Midshipman. How to crack the UnitedStates Naval Academy Application, 2n edition, 2008. Adapted fromhttps:// usnaorbust.wordpress.com)
Considering the text, the words "lofty" in how she accomplished such a lofty goal.n and "brushed off" in "[...] she brushed the negativity off [...] ." mean respectively.
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5600Q1047286 | Inglês, Adjetivos Adjectives, Cadete do Exército, ESCOLA NAVAL, Marinha

Texto associado.
Based on the text below, answer question.

The Future of Libraries Has Little to Do with Books

On a Monday morning between Christmas and New Year'sEve in Paris, the line for modern art museum Centre GeorgesPompidou winds around the block. But the patrons waiting inthe cold aren't there to catch a glimpse of a Magritte—they're young locais queueing for access through themuseum’s back door to another attraction: the publiclibrary.
In a digital age that has left book publishers reeling,libraries in the world's major cities seem poised for acomeback, though it1s one that has very little to do withbooks. The Independent Library Report — published inDecember by the U.K.'s Department for Culture, Media, andSport — found that libraries across the nation arereinventing themseives by increasingly becoming "vibrant andattractive community hubs", focusing on the "need to createdigital literacy, and in an ideal world, digital fluency.”
Taking into account the proliferation of freelancing,the gig economy, and remote working (also known as'technomadism'), the rise of library as community hub beginsto make sense. Cities are increasingly attracting locationindependent workers, and those workers need space andamenities that expensive and unreliable coffee shops simplycannot provide enough of.
Furthermore, when one considers that the mostvulnerable and underserved city dwellers are also those whogenerally do not have access to the Internet, the need for afree and publicly connected space becomes even clearer.
According to a 2013 Pew poli, 90 percent in the U.S.said their community would be negatively impacted if theirlocal library closed. But if libraries are going to survivethe digital age, they need to be more about helping patronsfilter vast quantities of digital Information rather thanaccess to analog materiais. Good news carne for U.S.libraries in November, when Federal CommunicationsCommission Chairman Tom Wheeler announced a 62 percentincrease in spending on high-speed Internet for schools andpublic libraries.
When it comes to this need for connectivity, Britainfslibrary report stated a "Wi-Fi connection should bedelivered in a comfortable, retail standard environment withthe usual amenities of coffee, sofas and etc." The reportsuggested that libraries focus less on loaning physicalbooks and more on widening access via loaning of e-books,which the report noted was up by 80 percent in Britain from2013.
Also in 2013, the first bookless public library in theUnited States opened in San Antonio, Texas. ThecityTs BiblioTech offers an all-digital, cloud-basedcollection of more than 10,000 e-books, plus e-readersavailable for checkout. Located in San Antonio’s underservedSouth Side, the BiblioTech provides an important digital hubin a city with a population that still struggles to connectto wireless Internet, Last month saw the opening of Canada'sHalifax Central Library, designed by a world-leading Danishdesign firm. With its auditorium, meeting space forentrepreneurs, multiple cafes, adult literacy classes andgaming facilities, actual books seemed like anafterthought.

(Abridged from http://magazine.good.is/articles/public-libraries-reimagined).
The word "unreliable" in " [...] those workers need space and amenities that expensive and unreliable coffee shops simply cannot provide enough of." is the opposite of.
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