Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 55 questões.

1671098 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Raciocínio Lógico
Banca: UFAL
Orgão: ALGÁS
Provas:
Um cinema de um shopping resolveu, para estimular o interesse matemático nos jovens, fazer a seguinte promoção: Seria premiado com um ingresso para assistir ao filme do dia quem respondesse corretamente a um problema proposto. Um garoto recebeu um cartão contendo as seguintes afirmações:
1. Neste cartão exatamente 1 sentença é falsa.
2. Neste cartão exatamente 2 sentenças são falsas.
3. Neste cartão exatamente 3 sentenças são falsas.
4. Neste cartão exatamente 4 sentenças são falsas.
5. Neste cartão exatamente 5 sentenças são falsas.
O garoto ganhou um ingresso para o filme do dia, respondendo a seguinte pergunta: Quantas dessas afirmações são falsas? Então, podemos concluir que a resposta do garoto a essa pergunta foi
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1670590 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Marketing
Banca: UFAL
Orgão: ALGÁS
Provas:
Em uma reunião com a Diretoria Geral, o analista de marketing da Algás, envolvido em conduzir um processo de segmentação de mercado, apresentou quatro segmentos aos quais a empresa está apta a atender com seus produtos. São elas:
I. Usinas da zona da Mata de Alagoas que demandam mais gás no período de safra.
II. Restaurantes com demanda regular de 02 pedidos por semana.
III. Novos condomínios com controle individual por apartamento.
IV. Grandes hotéis com faturamento mensal em torno de R$ 2.000.000,00.
Esses quatro segmentos podem ser classificados, respectivamente, como:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1666343 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Marketing
Banca: UFAL
Orgão: ALGÁS
Provas:
Um plano de marketing pode ser subdividido em cinco etapas. Durante uma determinada etapa, é estabelecido o posicionamento competitivo da linha de produtos, que orientará o plano de ação para alcançar os objetivos. Em qual etapa do plano isso é feito?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1665724 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Administração Geral
Banca: UFAL
Orgão: ALGÁS
Provas:
As estratégias em que (i) o produto tem características únicas e exclusivas, (ii) a empresa consegue cobrar um preço inferior ao dos concorrentes e (iii) a empresa constrói para a marca uma imagem exclusiva e valorizada, correspondem, respectivamente, à diferenciação por:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1657350 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Raciocínio Lógico
Banca: UFAL
Orgão: ALGÁS
Provas:
Dizemos que uma sentença composta é uma tautologia se seu valor lógico é sempre verdadeiro.
Considere que P e Q sejam proposições e que "Λ", "V", "~" e "→" sejam os conectores lógicos que representam, respectivamente, "e", "ou", "negação" e o "conector condicional".
Qual das sentenças compostas abaixo não é uma tautologia?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1656964 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Administração Geral
Banca: UFAL
Orgão: ALGÁS
Provas:
As variáveis macroambientais podem ser analisadas segundo uma técnica conhecida por:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1654620 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UFAL
Orgão: ALGÁS
Provas:
Big Macs, the dollar and the yuan
You know how it is –- you’re in a strange city, maybe a strange country, tired, hungry, missing home, it’s kind of late. You walk into that little (in my case, Chinese restaurant), there are teeth marks on the chopsticks, the floor is kind of sticky, and on the menu is the house specialty: rabbit face. Not quite what you wanted, but as luck would have it, just down the road you can see it in the distance – the golden arches, sitting high and proud calling to you.
OK, this might be (in my case) China, but you know that somehow, once you walk through those doors, there on the menu will be a cheeseburger, a Big Mac, Quarter Pounder and fries. And for the most part the food will taste pretty much like the Mickey Dee’s on Santa Monica not far from my old apartment in LA.
So, when I buy my Big Mac here in China, it’s just over 12 RMB, or $1.76. When I buy a Big Mac in L.A. it costs around $3.50. The great thing about a Big Mac as far as economists are concerned (well, the ones at “The Economist” magazine, anyway) is that it’s pretty much the same wherever you go . . . two all-beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, onions on a sesame seed bun.
And that means for economists it’s a great way to compare currencies. Much like the Big Mac itself, it’s not perfect – wages, rents and other costs vary, as well as the size (I have noticed the Chinese burgers a little on the small side). But for more than 20 years the people at “The Economist”____ ____ ____ this exchange rate comparison, and – surprise, surprise – they found Asian currencies under-valued, European over-valued.
In the case of China, by about 40 percent undervalued – this is at the far end of the spectrum as far as many critics in the U.S. are concerned. They accuse Beijing of deliberately manipulating the currency, keeping it undervalued. That means exports from China are a lot cheaper, giving exporters here an unfair competitive
advantage, they claim.
Imagine if you could go to that McDonald’s in L.A. and instead of paying $3.50 or so for the American Big Mac, you could pay $1.76 for the Chinese version, knowing the ingredients are the same.
Fonte: cnn.com
According to the text the price of a Big Mac in China is:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1640362 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Raciocínio Lógico
Banca: UFAL
Orgão: ALGÁS
Provas:
Três pessoas estão sendo acusados por um erro técnico:
Arnaldo, Ernaldo e Irnaldo. O erro pode ter sido cometido por um deles ou por mais de um deles. Conhecendo as seguintes afirmações,
I. Se Irnaldo é inocente, então Ernaldo é culpado;
II. Ou Arnaldo é culpado ou Ernaldo é culpado, mas não os dois;
III. Arnaldo cometeu um erro técnico.
podemos concluir que
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1640087 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UFAL
Orgão: ALGÁS
Provas:
Big Macs, the dollar and the yuan
You know how it is –- you’re in a strange city, maybe a strange country, tired, hungry, missing home, it’s kind of late. You walk into that little (in my case, Chinese restaurant), there are teeth marks on the chopsticks, the floor is kind of sticky, and on the menu is the house specialty: rabbit face. Not quite what you wanted, but as luck would have it, just down the road you can see it in the distance – the golden arches, sitting high and proud calling to you.
OK, this might be (in my case) China, but you know that somehow, once you walk through those doors, there on the menu will be a cheeseburger, a Big Mac, Quarter Pounder and fries. And for the most part the food will taste pretty much like the Mickey Dee’s on Santa Monica not far from my old apartment in LA.
So, when I buy my Big Mac here in China, it’s just over 12 RMB, or $1.76. When I buy a Big Mac in L.A. it costs around $3.50. The great thing about a Big Mac as far as economists are concerned (well, the ones at “The Economist” magazine, anyway) is that it’s pretty much the same wherever you go . . . two all-beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, onions on a sesame seed bun.
And that means for economists it’s a great way to compare currencies. Much like the Big Mac itself, it’s not perfect – wages, rents and other costs vary, as well as the size (I have noticed the Chinese burgers a little on the small side). But for more than 20 years the people at “The Economist”____ ____ ____ this exchange rate comparison, and – surprise, surprise – they found Asian currencies under-valued, European over-valued.
In the case of China, by about 40 percent undervalued – this is at the far end of the spectrum as far as many critics in the U.S. are concerned. They accuse Beijing of deliberately manipulating the currency, keeping it undervalued. That means exports from China are a lot cheaper, giving exporters here an unfair competitive
advantage, they claim.
Imagine if you could go to that McDonald’s in L.A. and instead of paying $3.50 or so for the American Big Mac, you could pay $1.76 for the Chinese version, knowing the ingredients are the same.
Fonte: cnn.com
Complete the sentence from the text using the correct verb tense: “But for more than 20 years the people at “The Economist” ____ ____ ____ this exchange rate comparison, and – surprise, …”
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1635899 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UFAL
Orgão: ALGÁS
Provas:
A CLEANING THAT CAN STAVE OFF THE FLU
A host of recent studies have highlighted the importance and the scientific underpinning of a most basic hygiene measure. One of the most graphic was done at the University of California, Berkeley, where researchers focused video cameras on 10 college students as they read and typed on their laptops.
The scientists counted the times the students touched their faces, documenting every lip scratch, eye rub and nose pick. On average, the students touched their eyes, noses and lips 47 times during a three-hour period, once every four minutes. Hand-to-face contact has a surprising impact on health. Germs can enter the body through breaks in the skin or through the membranes of the eyes, mouth and nose.
During the eight-week study period, students in the dorms with ready access to hand sanitizers had a third fewer complaints of coughs, chest congestion and fever. Over all, the risk of getting sick was 20 percent lower in the dorms where hand hygiene was emphasized, and those students missed 43 percent fewer days of school.
Better hand hygiene also appears to make a difference in the home, lowering the risk to other family members when one child is sick. In homes with hand sanitizers, the risk of catching a gastrointestinal illness from a sick child dropped 60 percent compared with the other families.
Regular soap and water and alcohol-based hand sanitizers are both effective in eliminating the H1N1 virus from the hands.
Frequent hand washing will not eliminate risk. When an infected person coughs or sneezes, a bystander might be splattered by large droplets or may inhale airborne particles. Still, it is a good idea to wash your hands regularly even if you’re not in contact people who are obviously ill.
For all those reasons, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with other health organizations around the world, urge frequent hand washing with soap and water or alcohol-based hand sanitizers. (They also repeat some advice you may not have heard from your mother: cough or sneeze into the crook of your elbow, not your bare hands.)
Article published at The New York Times, September, 14 2009. The text was adapted for this test.
The correct alternative which describes the general topic of this article is:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas