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Questões de Concursos Inglês

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61Q860715 | Inglês, Verbos modais em inglês

(UFRRJ) In the sentence, “the casualties were fewer than might have occurred”, the underlined word implies:

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62Q118241 | Inglês, Interpretação de Textos, Analista de Sistemas, INB, CONSULPLAN

Texto associado.

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Os lobos da história do velho índio simbolizam:

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64Q860745 | Inglês, Tempos verbais em inglês

Segundo o estudo sobre “Past continuous”, qual das alternativas a seguir está nesse tempo verbal da língua inglesa?

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65Q194570 | Inglês, Aluno EsFCEx, EsFCEx, EsFCEx

Choose the option that correctly completes the sentence:
I arrived home on foot and my husband asked me where ________________

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66Q860741 | Inglês, Tempos verbais em inglês

(UFRR/2010)

Mary: "I am about to fall asleep. I need to wake up!"
Clare: "I ______ you some coffee."

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67Q860626 | Inglês, Verbo to be

Qual a alternativa abaixo completa a frase: "You ____ all great singers."

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68Q117839 | Inglês, Interpretação de Textos, Analista de Sistemas, INB, CONSULPLAN

Texto associado.

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Pela resposta de Tsali, o garoto:

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69Q23592 | Inglês, Analista Administrativo, CEMIG

Assinale a alternativa que apresenta os termos que preenchem CORRETAMENTE as lacunas existentes nos enunciados seguintes, de cima para baixo:

I. These bees ___________ kept in a large hive before they were taken out and examined by the beekeeper.
II. A thief came into his house, tied him up, took his money, and left. He ___________ tied up for several hours.
III. John doesn"t cook very well. He _____________ helped by his wife.
IV. Amanda is pregnant. She expects her baby ______________ in November.
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70Q18921 | Inglês, Oficial do Exército, EsFCEx, Exército Brasileiro

Which alternative best completes the following sentence?

My sister spent most of her life __________ a small town _________ the south _________Bahia.
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71Q931242 | Inglês, Vestibular ENEM, ENEM, INEP

Texto associado.
National Geographic News
Christine Dell’Amore
Published April 26, 2010
Our bodies produce a small steady amount of natural
morphine, a new study suggests. Traces of the chemical
are often found in mouse and human urine, leading
scientists to wonder whether the drug is being made
naturally or being delivered by something the subjects
consumed. The new research shows that mice produce
the “incredible painkiller” — and that humans and other
mammals possess the same chemical road map for
making it, said study co-author Meinhart Zenk, who studies
plant-based pharmaceuticals at the Donald Danforth Plant
Science Center in St. Louis, Missouri.
Disponível em: www.nationalgeographic.com. Acesso em: 27 jul. 2010.
Ao ler a matéria publicada na National Geographic, para a realização de um trabalho escolar, um estudante descobriu que
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72Q53061 | Inglês, Sargento da Aeronáutica, EEAR, 2017

Read the movie review below and ans wer question.

The Cutting Edge


Skating fans, listen up! The Cutting Edge is a romantic movie with _____ skaters. The stars are practicing for the Winter Olympics. Kate Mosely looks _______ on the ice, but she isn’t a _______ person. All her partners leave _____. Then her coach introduces her to Doug Dorsey. Doug was a hockey star, so he skates well. At first, they argue. To Kate, Doug is the wrong choice (he is not a dancer). To Doug, ice dancing isn’t a serious sport.

Adapted from: Grammar Express Basic – For Self-Study and Classroom Use.

Choose the best alternative that completes the blanks with adjectives or adverbs. 
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73Q860635 | Inglês, Verbo to be

Qual é a alternativa correta para transformar a frase "You are happy." em interrogativa?

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74Q116839 | Inglês, Interpretação de Textos, Analista de Sistemas, INB, CONSULPLAN

Texto associado.

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A batalha a que Tsali se refere acontece no plano:

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75Q47676 | Inglês, Professor de Inglês, Prefeitura de Biguaçu SC, UNISUL

English as a Global Language

For more than half a century, immigrants from the Indian subcontinent and the West Indies have added variety and diversity to the rich patchwork of accents and dialects spoken in the UK. British colonisers originally exported the language to all four corners of the globe and migration in the 1950s brought altered forms of English back to these shores. ___________(1) that time, especially in urban areas, speakers of Asian and Caribbean descent have blended their mother tongue speech patterns with existing local dialects producing wonderful new varieties of English, ___________(2) London Jamaican or Bradford Asian English. Standard British English has also been enriched by an explosion of new terms, such as balti (a dish invented in the West Midlands and defined by a word that would refer to a "bucket" rather than food to most South Asians outside the UK) and bhangra (traditional Punjabi music mixed with reggae and hiphop).
The recordings on this site of speakers from minority ethnic backgrounds include a range of speakers. You can hear speakers whose speech is heavily influenced by their racial background, alongside those whose speech reveals nothing of their family background and some who are ranged somewhere in between. There are also a set of audio clips that shed light on some of the more recognisable features of Asian English and Caribbean English.
Slang
As with the Anglo-Saxon and Norman settlers of centuries past, the languages spoken by today’s ethnic communities have begun to have an impact on the everyday spoken English of other communities. For instance, many young people, regardless of their ethnic background, now use the black slang terms, nang (‘cool,’) and diss (‘insult’ — from ‘disrespecting’) or words derived from Hindi and Urdu, such as chuddies (‘underpants’) or desi (‘typically Asian’). Many also use the all-purpose tag-question, innit — as in statements such as you’re weird, innit. This feature has been variously ascribed to the British Caribbean community or the British Asian community, although it is also part of a more native British tradition - in dialects in the West Country and Wales, for instance — which might explain why it appears to have spread so rapidly among young speakers everywhere.
Original influences from overseas
The English Language can be traced back to the mixture of Anglo-Saxon dialects that came to these shores 1500 years ago. Since then it has been played with, altered and transported around the world in many different forms. The language we now recognise as English first became the dominant language in Great Britain during the Middle Ages, and in Ireland during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. From there it has been exported in the mouths of colonists and settlers to all four corners of the globe. ‘International English’, ‘World English’ or ‘Global English’ are terms used to describe a type of ‘General English’ that has, over the course of the twentieth century, become a worldwide means of communication. 
American English 
The first permanent English-speaking colony was established in North America in the early 1600s. The Americans soon developed a form of English that differed in a number of ways from the language spoken back in The British Isles. In some cases older forms were retained — the way most Americans pronounce the sound after a vowel in words like start, north, nurse and letter is probably very similar to pronunciation in 17th century England. Similarly, the distinction between past tense got and past participle gotten still exists in American English but has been lost in most dialects of the UK. 
But the Americans also invented many new words to describe landscapes, wildlife, vegetation, food and lifestyles. Different pronunciations of existing words emerged as new settlers arrived from various parts of the UK and established settlements scattered along the East Coast and further inland. After the USA achieved independence from Great Britain in 1776 any sense of who ‘owned’ and set the ‘correct rules’ for the English Language became increasingly blurred. Different forces operating in the UK and in the USA influenced the emerging concept of a Standard English. The differences are perhaps first officially promoted in the spelling conventions proposed by Noah Webster in The American Spelling Book (1786) and subsequently adopted in his later work, An American Dictionary of the English Language (1828). Both of these publications were enormously successful and established spellings such as center and color and were therefore major steps towards scholarly acceptance that British English and American English were becoming distinct entities.
Influence of Empire
Meanwhile, elsewhere, the British Empire was expanding dramatically, and during the 1700s British English established footholds in parts of Africa, in India, Australia and New Zealand. The colonisation process in these countries varied. In Australia and New Zealand, European settlers quickly outnumbered the indigenous population and so English was established as the dominant language. In India and Africa, however, centuries of colonial rule saw English imposed as an administrative language, spoken as a mother tongue by colonial settlers from the UK, but in most cases as a second language by the local population.
English around the world
Like American English, English in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa has evolved such that they are distinct from British English. However, cultural and political ties have meant that until relatively recently British English has acted as the benchmark for representing ‘standardised’ English — spelling tends to adhere to British English conventions, for instance. Elsewhere in Africa and on the Indian subcontinent, English is still used as an official language in several countries, even though these countries are independent of British rule. However, English remains very much a second language for most people, used in administration, education and government and as a means of communicating between speakers of diverse languages. As with most of the Commonwealth, British English is the model on which, for instance, Indian English or Nigerian English is based. In the Caribbean and especially in Canada, however, historical links with the UK compete with geographical, cultural and economic ties with the USA, so that some aspects of the local varieties of English follow British norms and others reflect US usage. 
An international language
English is also hugely important as an international language and plays an important part even in countries where the UK has historically had little influence. It is learnt as the principal foreign language in most schools in Western Europe. It is also an essential part of the curriculum in far-flung places like Japan and South Korea, and is increasingly seen as desirable by millions of speakers in China. Prior to WWII, most teaching of English as a foreign language used British English as its model, and textbooks and other educational resources were produced here in the UK for use overseas. This reflected the UK"s cultural dominance and its perceived ‘ownership’ of the English Language. Since 1945, however, the increasing economic power of the USA and its unrivalled influence in popular culture has meant that American English has become the reference point for learners of English in places like Japan and even to a certain extent in some European countries. British English remains the model in most Commonwealth countries where English is learnt as a second language. However, as the history of English has shown, this situation may not last indefinitely. The increasing commercial and economic power of countries like India, for instance, might mean that Indian English will one day begin to have an impact beyond its own borders.

https://www.bl.uk/learning/langlit/sounds/case-studies/minority-ethnic/ 

In the excerpt : “For instance, many young people, regardless of their ethnic background, now use the black slang terms, nang (‘cool,’) and diss (‘insult’ — from ‘disrespecting’) or words derived from Hindi and Urdu, such as chuddies (‘underpants’) or desi (‘typically Asian’)” which of the words below could replace the underlined word without changing its meaning. 
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76Q860709 | Inglês, Verbos modais em inglês

Texto associado.

(Unesp/2017)

“One never builds something finished”:
the brilliance of architect Paulo Mendes da Rocha

Oliver Wainwright
February 4, 2017

“All space is public,” says Paulo Mendes da Rocha. “The only private space that you can imagine is in the human mind.” It is an optimistic statement from the 88-year-old Brazilian architect, given he is a resident of São Paulo, a city where the triumph of the private realm over the public could not be more stark. The sprawling megalopolis is a place of such marked inequality that its superrich hop between their rooftop helipads because they are too scared of street crime to come down from the clouds.

But for Mendes da Rocha, who received the 2017 gold medal from the Royal Institute of British Architects this week – an accolade previously bestowed on such luminaries as Le Corbusier and Frank Lloyd Wright – the ground is everything. He has spent his 60-year career lifting his massive concrete buildings up, in gravity-defying balancing acts, or else burying them below ground in an attempt to liberate the Earth’s surface as a continuous democratic public realm. “The city has to be for everybody,” he says, “not just for the very few.”

(www.theguardian.com. Adaptado.)

No trecho do segundo parágrafo “The city has to be for everybody”, a expressão em destaque pode ser substituída, sem alteração de sentido, por

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77Q30386 | Inglês, Analista Trainee de Ciências Contábeis, CPTM, MAKIYAMA

Texto associado.
 Generation Y
By Sally Kane, About.com Guide

Born in the mid-1980"s and later, Generation Y legal professionals are in their 20s and are just entering the workforce. With numbers estimated as high as 70 million, Generation Y (also -1- as the Millennials) is the fastest growing segment of today"s workforce. As law firms compete for available talent, employers cannot ignore the needs, desires and attitudes of this vast generation. Below are a few common traits that define Generation Y.

Tech-Savvy: Generation Y grew up with technology and rely on it to perform their jobs better. Armed with BlackBerrys, laptops, cellphones and other gadgets, Generation Y is plugged-in 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. This generation prefers to communicate through e-mail and text messaging rather than face-to-face contact and -2- webinars and online technology to traditional lecture-based presentations.

Family-Centric: The fast-track has lost much of its appeal for Generation Y who is willing to trade high pay for fewer billable hours, flexible schedules and a better work/life balance. While older generations may view this attitude as narcissistic or lacking commitment, discipline and drive, Generation Y legal professionals have a different vision of workplace expectations and prioritize family over work.

Achievement-Oriented: Nurtured and pampered -3- parents who did not want to make the mistakes of the previous generation, Generation Y is confident, ambitious and achievement-oriented. They have high expectations of their employers, seek out new challenges and are not afraid to question authority. Generation Y wants meaningful work and a solid learning curve

Team-Oriented: As children, Generation Y participated in team sports, play groups and other group activities. They value teamwork and seek the input and affirmation of others. Part of a no-person-left-behind generation, Generation Y is loyal, committed and wants to be included and involved.

Attention-Craving: Generation Y craves attention in the forms of feedback and guidance. They appreciate being kept in the loop and seek frequent praise and reassurance. Generation Y may benefit greatly from mentors who can help guide and develop their young careers.

Font: http://legalcareers.about.com/od/practicetips/a/Ge...
Which of the following alternatives has the same verb tense as the sentence“Generation Y grew up with technology”?
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78Q52601 | Inglês, Oficial da Marinha, Escola Naval, MB, 2018

Which option best completes the paragraph beiow?

"Waking up after a couple of hours may not be insomnia," wrote Wehr. "It may be normal sleep." Ekirch added, "If people don"t fight it, they"ll find______falling asleep again after roughly one hour."

(https ://amp.Iivescience.com)
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79Q860630 | Inglês, Verbo to be

Escolha uma das alternativas abaixo para completar a frase: "They ____ at home right now."

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80Q240072 | Inglês, Aspectos Gramaticais, Redator Júnior Bilingue, COPEL, PUC PR

Choose the only correct alternative to fill in the blanks:

I. Brazil is ________ Argentina.

II. Japan is _________ Bolivia.

III. The Everest is _________mountain in the world.

IV. France is not __________ Canada.

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