Foram encontradas 120 questões.
Phytothérapie
La phytothérapie (phyto, plante) est une médecine traditionnelle ancestrale basée sur l’utilisation des propriétés pharmacologiques naturelles des plantes médicinales qui ont des principes actifs différents. Elles sont utilisées depuis au moins 7.000 ans avant notre ère par les hommes. Mais l’efficacité de la phytothérapie reste toujours discutée ; l’Organisation mondiale de la Santé-OMS explique que « peu d’espèces de plantes ont été étudiées pour d’éventuelles applications médicales ».
Ajoutons que, à cause des risques éventuels d’effets indésirables, d’interactions médicamenteuses et de toxicité de certaines plantes, informez toujours votre médecin, si vous recourrez régulièrement à la phytothérapie.
Internet : <www.futura-sciences.com > (texte adapté).
On peut affirmer que
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Elephant Crisis: The Largest Land Mammal Needs our Help
by Dr. Dame Daphne Sheldrick
Elephants have captured the imagination of individuals across the world. Majestic beings, they have fascinated even those who may never have enjoyed close contact with them.
It’s this empathy that has led thousands of people worldwide today to join the International March for Elephants organized by iworry, a campaign by the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, to publicize the warning that the future survival of elephants is at serious risk.
Some may wonder why elephants matter. I have been privileged to live amongst them and have nurtured a lifelong passion to protect them for over 55 years. My team and I have hand-reared more than 160 orphaned elephants to date, some from the day they were born. It’s a long-term commitment, and I have known them intimately throughout infancy and childhood into their teenage years and beyond.
Scientific studies of elephants have now led to the acceptance of abilities that we have observed on a daily basis for many years. Elephants share the same emotions as humans, with a strong sense of family and the same sense of death. Like us, they suffer with the loss of loved ones. Each has an individual personality just like us. They can be mischievous, playful, feel offended or foolish.
In many ways they are better than us, and they have attributes that we humans lack, such as the ability to communicate over distance using low range sound hidden to human ears. They have telepathic capabilities, as well as being sensitive to seismic sound through their feet. Yet for all the worldly reverence for elephants, they are today being hunted and killed at a catastrophic rate for something as simple as a tooth.
The phenomenon of poaching elephants for their tusks is not new. It was only through awareness campaigns and international pressure that a ban on the international sale of ivory was enacted in 1989. This ban provided a brief relief for elephants by stopping an increasing trade that in some regions caused the loss of up to 80 percent of herds.
However, poaching has escalated in already devastated populations recently. The interest in ivory stimulated demand, and the result is that elephants are now being poached at the highest rate since records of their numbers began. Current estimates put the figure at 36,000 elephants killed annually, which means one elephant dying every 15 minutes.
To date we’ve arrested 1,406 poachers, and our veterinary teams have successfully treated over 500 wounded elephants. As long as any trade in ivory remains—legal or illegal, global or domestic—elephants will continue to be cruelly killed for their tusks.
Internet: <www.nationalgeographic.com> (adapted).
The word “may” in the sentence “Some may wonder why elephants matter.” expresses
Provas
Elephant Crisis: The Largest Land Mammal Needs our Help
by Dr. Dame Daphne Sheldrick
Elephants have captured the imagination of individuals across the world. Majestic beings, they have fascinated even those who may never have enjoyed close contact with them.
It’s this empathy that has led thousands of people worldwide today to join the International March for Elephants organized by iworry, a campaign by the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, to publicize the warning that the future survival of elephants is at serious risk.
Some may wonder why elephants matter. I have been privileged to live amongst them and have nurtured a lifelong passion to protect them for over 55 years. My team and I have hand-reared more than 160 orphaned elephants to date, some from the day they were born. It’s a long-term commitment, and I have known them intimately throughout infancy and childhood into their teenage years and beyond.
Scientific studies of elephants have now led to the acceptance of abilities that we have observed on a daily basis for many years. Elephants share the same emotions as humans, with a strong sense of family and the same sense of death. Like us, they suffer with the loss of loved ones. Each has an individual personality just like us. They can be mischievous, playful, feel offended or foolish.
In many ways they are better than us, and they have attributes that we humans lack, such as the ability to communicate over distance using low range sound hidden to human ears. They have telepathic capabilities, as well as being sensitive to seismic sound through their feet. Yet for all the worldly reverence for elephants, they are today being hunted and killed at a catastrophic rate for something as simple as a tooth.
The phenomenon of poaching elephants for their tusks is not new. It was only through awareness campaigns and international pressure that a ban on the international sale of ivory was enacted in 1989. This ban provided a brief relief for elephants by stopping an increasing trade that in some regions caused the loss of up to 80 percent of herds.
However, poaching has escalated in already devastated populations recently. The interest in ivory stimulated demand, and the result is that elephants are now being poached at the highest rate since records of their numbers began. Current estimates put the figure at 36,000 elephants killed annually, which means one elephant dying every 15 minutes.
To date we’ve arrested 1,406 poachers, and our veterinary teams have successfully treated over 500 wounded elephants. As long as any trade in ivory remains—legal or illegal, global or domestic—elephants will continue to be cruelly killed for their tusks.
Internet: <www.nationalgeographic.com> (adapted).
In relation to Dr. Daphne’s Sheldrick’s work, it is correct to state that
Provas
Phytothérapie
La phytothérapie (phyto, plante) est une médecine traditionnelle ancestrale basée sur l’utilisation des propriétés pharmacologiques naturelles des plantes médicinales qui ont des principes actifs différents. Elles sont utilisées depuis au moins 7.000 ans avant notre ère par les hommes. Mais l’efficacité de la phytothérapie reste toujours discutée ; l’Organisation mondiale de la Santé-OMS explique que « peu d’espèces de plantes ont été étudiées pour d’éventuelles applications médicales ».
Ajoutons que, à cause des risques éventuels d’effets indésirables, d’interactions médicamenteuses et de toxicité de certaines plantes, informez toujours votre médecin, si vous recourrez régulièrement à la phytothérapie.
Internet : <www.futura-sciences.com > (texte adapté).
Selon cet article de Futura-Sciences,
Provas
Disciplina: Espanhol (Língua Espanhola)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: ESCS
Infecciones hospitalarias, un problema común
Una infección hospitalaria o nosocomial es un proceso contraído en un centro sanitario. Por definición, el paciente que la padece no presentaba síntomas ni signos de la enfermedad en el momento de su ingreso ni estaba en periodo de incubación. Los agentes infecciosos suelen ser organismos oportunistas que viven en los hospitales y aprovechan la debilidad de la persona para invadir su organismo.
Según las estadísticas de la Organización Mundial de la Salud, una media del 8,7% de los pacientes de un hospital presentan infecciones nosocomiales. Las más frecuentes son las de heridas quirúrgicas, tracto urinario (relacionadas con el empleo de sondas vesicales), vías respiratorias inferiores (tráquea y bronquios) y las asociadas al uso de catéteres.
No todas las personas que están ingresadas en un centro sanitario son igual de vulnerables frente a estos microorganismos. Los pacientes geriátricos, los inmunodeprimidos, los que reciben quimioterapia y los neonatos son las metas principales de estos agentes oportunistas debido a que su sistema inmune está debilitado lo que facilita la colonización de los microorganismos.
Bacterias, virus, hongos y otros patógenos están detrás de estas infecciones, que suelen ser difíciles de tratar con los antibióticos habituales. Puede haber contagios cruzados (cuando el agente se contrae de otro enfermo), endógenos (cuando procede de la flora del propio individuo) o ambientales (por contacto con material contaminado).
Internet: <www.elmundo.es> (con adaptaciones).
La expresión “debido a que” introduce
Provas
Disciplina: Espanhol (Língua Espanhola)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: ESCS
Infecciones hospitalarias, un problema común
Una infección hospitalaria o nosocomial es un proceso contraído en un centro sanitario. Por definición, el paciente que la padece no presentaba síntomas ni signos de la enfermedad en el momento de su ingreso ni estaba en periodo de incubación. Los agentes infecciosos suelen ser organismos oportunistas que viven en los hospitales y aprovechan la debilidad de la persona para invadir su organismo.
Según las estadísticas de la Organización Mundial de la Salud, una media del 8,7% de los pacientes de un hospital presentan infecciones nosocomiales. Las más frecuentes son las de heridas quirúrgicas, tracto urinario (relacionadas con el empleo de sondas vesicales), vías respiratorias inferiores (tráquea y bronquios) y las asociadas al uso de catéteres.
No todas las personas que están ingresadas en un centro sanitario son igual de vulnerables frente a estos microorganismos. Los pacientes geriátricos, los inmunodeprimidos, los que reciben quimioterapia y los neonatos son las metas principales de estos agentes oportunistas debido a que su sistema inmune está debilitado lo que facilita la colonización de los microorganismos.
Bacterias, virus, hongos y otros patógenos están detrás de estas infecciones, que suelen ser difíciles de tratar con los antibióticos habituales. Puede haber contagios cruzados (cuando el agente se contrae de otro enfermo), endógenos (cuando procede de la flora del propio individuo) o ambientales (por contacto con material contaminado).
Internet: <www.elmundo.es> (con adaptaciones).
El elemento “lo” se refiere
Provas
Elephant Crisis: The Largest Land Mammal Needs our Help
by Dr. Dame Daphne Sheldrick
Elephants have captured the imagination of individuals across the world. Majestic beings, they have fascinated even those who may never have enjoyed close contact with them.
It’s this empathy that has led thousands of people worldwide today to join the International March for Elephants organized by iworry, a campaign by the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, to publicize the warning that the future survival of elephants is at serious risk.
Some may wonder why elephants matter. I have been privileged to live amongst them and have nurtured a lifelong passion to protect them for over 55 years. My team and I have hand-reared more than 160 orphaned elephants to date, some from the day they were born. It’s a long-term commitment, and I have known them intimately throughout infancy and childhood into their teenage years and beyond.
Scientific studies of elephants have now led to the acceptance of abilities that we have observed on a daily basis for many years. Elephants share the same emotions as humans, with a strong sense of family and the same sense of death. Like us, they suffer with the loss of loved ones. Each has an individual personality just like us. They can be mischievous, playful, feel offended or foolish.
In many ways they are better than us, and they have attributes that we humans lack, such as the ability to communicate over distance using low range sound hidden to human ears. They have telepathic capabilities, as well as being sensitive to seismic sound through their feet. Yet for all the worldly reverence for elephants, they are today being hunted and killed at a catastrophic rate for something as simple as a tooth.
The phenomenon of poaching elephants for their tusks is not new. It was only through awareness campaigns and international pressure that a ban on the international sale of ivory was enacted in 1989. This ban provided a brief relief for elephants by stopping an increasing trade that in some regions caused the loss of up to 80 percent of herds.
However, poaching has escalated in already devastated populations recently. The interest in ivory stimulated demand, and the result is that elephants are now being poached at the highest rate since records of their numbers began. Current estimates put the figure at 36,000 elephants killed annually, which means one elephant dying every 15 minutes.
To date we’ve arrested 1,406 poachers, and our veterinary teams have successfully treated over 500 wounded elephants. As long as any trade in ivory remains—legal or illegal, global or domestic—elephants will continue to be cruelly killed for their tusks.
Internet: <www.nationalgeographic.com> (adapted).
From the sentence “Scientific studies of elephants have now led to the acceptance of abilities that we have observed on a daily basis for many years.”, it can be understood that
Provas
Elephant Crisis: The Largest Land Mammal Needs our Help
by Dr. Dame Daphne Sheldrick
Elephants have captured the imagination of individuals across the world. Majestic beings, they have fascinated even those who may never have enjoyed close contact with them.
It’s this empathy that has led thousands of people worldwide today to join the International March for Elephants organized by iworry, a campaign by the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, to publicize the warning that the future survival of elephants is at serious risk.
Some may wonder why elephants matter. I have been privileged to live amongst them and have nurtured a lifelong passion to protect them for over 55 years. My team and I have hand-reared more than 160 orphaned elephants to date, some from the day they were born. It’s a long-term commitment, and I have known them intimately throughout infancy and childhood into their teenage years and beyond.
Scientific studies of elephants have now led to the acceptance of abilities that we have observed on a daily basis for many years. Elephants share the same emotions as humans, with a strong sense of family and the same sense of death. Like us, they suffer with the loss of loved ones. Each has an individual personality just like us. They can be mischievous, playful, feel offended or foolish.
In many ways they are better than us, and they have attributes that we humans lack, such as the ability to communicate over distance using low range sound hidden to human ears. They have telepathic capabilities, as well as being sensitive to seismic sound through their feet. Yet for all the worldly reverence for elephants, they are today being hunted and killed at a catastrophic rate for something as simple as a tooth.
The phenomenon of poaching elephants for their tusks is not new. It was only through awareness campaigns and international pressure that a ban on the international sale of ivory was enacted in 1989. This ban provided a brief relief for elephants by stopping an increasing trade that in some regions caused the loss of up to 80 percent of herds.
However, poaching has escalated in already devastated populations recently. The interest in ivory stimulated demand, and the result is that elephants are now being poached at the highest rate since records of their numbers began. Current estimates put the figure at 36,000 elephants killed annually, which means one elephant dying every 15 minutes.
To date we’ve arrested 1,406 poachers, and our veterinary teams have successfully treated over 500 wounded elephants. As long as any trade in ivory remains—legal or illegal, global or domestic—elephants will continue to be cruelly killed for their tusks.
Internet: <www.nationalgeographic.com> (adapted).
Based on the article above, it is correct to say that
Provas
Disciplina: Espanhol (Língua Espanhola)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: ESCS
Infecciones hospitalarias, un problema común
Una infección hospitalaria o nosocomial es un proceso contraído en un centro sanitario. Por definición, el paciente que la padece no presentaba síntomas ni signos de la enfermedad en el momento de su ingreso ni estaba en periodo de incubación. Los agentes infecciosos suelen ser organismos oportunistas que viven en los hospitales y aprovechan la debilidad de la persona para invadir su organismo.
Según las estadísticas de la Organización Mundial de la Salud, una media del 8,7% de los pacientes de un hospital presentan infecciones nosocomiales. Las más frecuentes son las de heridas quirúrgicas, tracto urinario (relacionadas con el empleo de sondas vesicales), vías respiratorias inferiores (tráquea y bronquios) y las asociadas al uso de catéteres.
No todas las personas que están ingresadas en un centro sanitario son igual de vulnerables frente a estos microorganismos. Los pacientes geriátricos, los inmunodeprimidos, los que reciben quimioterapia y los neonatos son las metas principales de estos agentes oportunistas debido a que su sistema inmune está debilitado lo que facilita la colonización de los microorganismos.
Bacterias, virus, hongos y otros patógenos están detrás de estas infecciones, que suelen ser difíciles de tratar con los antibióticos habituales. Puede haber contagios cruzados (cuando el agente se contrae de otro enfermo), endógenos (cuando procede de la flora del propio individuo) o ambientales (por contacto con material contaminado).
Internet: <www.elmundo.es> (con adaptaciones).
La expresión “frente a” puede ser remplazada, sin que se produzcan alteraciones semánticas en el texto, por
Provas
Universités et écoles de formations au Sénégal
L’éducation au Sénégal reste une priorité pour les autorités étatiques. Avec le développement du secteur, le nombre d’écoles de formations d’études supérieures et autres universités privées n’a cessé d’augmenter, surtout durant cette dernière décennie.
La demande est forte, grâce à la réputation de qualité de l’enseignement au Sénégal, mais aussi à des nouvelles filières et spécialisations, surtout en médecine. Pour les étudiants et les professionnels soucieux d’approfondir leurs connaissances médicales et paramédicales, les possibilités de choix d’études sont aujourd’hui multiples et variées, tant à Dakar qu’à l’intérieur du pays.
Internet: <www.au-senegal.com> (texte adapté).
Selon le texte, on peut conclure que
Provas
Caderno Container