Foram encontradas 40 questões.
O texto a seguir é referência para a questão.
Local Tours
Kenya appears in many brochures. The Kenyan government has made tourist development a priority. It has spent money on building hotels, airports, safari lodges and all the other requirements for tourists from developed countries. The planes landing at Nairobi airport bring rich tourists from Europe, North America and Japan. Some come for Kenya’s fine beaches. Most are interested in the wildlife of East Africa. Lions, cheetahs, elephants and hippopotamuses are among the attractions.
Kenya’s tourist industry earns the country over £200 million per year, but tourism does bring problems for a developing country.
• Only 75% of the money spent by tourists stays in Kenya. The rest is taken by foreign companies which provide the hotels and the safaris.
• The tourist drinks Scotch whisky or Russian vodka. The hotels are fitted with American air-conditioning and Japanese lifts. The electrical system is Dutch and the fire control system is Italian. The safari vehicles are Japanese Land Cruisers. These imports cost Kenya vital foreign exchange.
• Kenya borrowed money from overseas to pay for the tourist developments, and much of the profits from tourism are spent in repaying the loans.
• There have been several armed attacks on tourists. The bad publicity hit Kenya’s tourist earnings because people were frightened off. It is risky to become over-dependent upon tourism.
Most of the jobs created for Kenyans are unskilled and poorly paid. Some complain that tourism is a new form of colonialism. Tourism has also come into conflict with Kenya’s rapid population growth. More mouths to feed means more demand for farmland. Already some Kenyans are demanding that the National Parks be opened up for farming.
(Retrieved from: STOTT, Trish & HOLT, Roger. First class. English for tourism. Oxford: OUP, 1995. (p. 71)
Com base no texto, considere as seguintes afirmativas:
1. Turistas ricos advindos da América do Norte, da Europa e do Japão são os principais visitantes do Quênia.
2. Os hotéis e aeroportos do Quênia são equipados com aparelhos advindos da América do Norte e da Europa.
3. O governo queniano fez empréstimos de empresas estrangeiras para poder se adequar às exigências dos turistas.
4. Houve muitos ataques da mídia à indústria do turismo queniano em função dos altos preços cobrados dos turistas.
Assinale a alternativa correta.
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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
O texto abaixo é referência para a questão.
Fizzy drinks ‘disrupt children’s sleep’
It is something parents have long suspected – now scientists have confirmed that fizzy drinks affect children’s behaviour.
Teenagers who drink more caffeinated soft drinks sleep less, are more likely to wake during the night and tend to be sleepier during the day, a study has found.
And with one in eight teenagers now drinking more than 22 cans of cola a week, the findings will add to concerns about the effects on their health.
It will also lead to calls for schools to withdraw their lucrative drinks vending machines.
The experts tracked nearly 200 teenagers, aged 14 to 16, for two weeks, recording their sleep patterns and daily intake of caffeinated drinks and foods.
The average daily intake of caffeine was just 63mg, equivalent to half a cup of coffee, but some of the teenagers in the study were taking in up to 800mg.
Boys tended to consume more caffeine than girls – about 70mg daily, compared with 55mg.
Those who reported higher intakes of caffeine had disrupted sleep patterns – being more likely to wake during the night and to sleep for less time. But during the day, the same teenagers tended to be sleepier. The experts say the result means that even small amounts of caffeine can affect children, and soft drinks vending machines should be banned from schools.
The study, published in the journal Paediatrics today, was led by Dr. Charles Pollack of Ohio State University in the U.S.
He said: “The increasing availability of soft drink dispensing machines in schools is apparently welcomed by students and is profitable to school boards, but our findings suggest that it may be interfering with the night-time sleep of teenagers”.
Dr. Pollack said the time may come when soft drinks manufacturers would be forced to either limit the caffeine content in their products or not target children with them.
The research adds to the findings of a UK study published in October, which concluded that additives used in hundreds of children’s foods and drinks can cause disruptive behaviour.
The Government-funded report involved 227 three-year-olds from the Isle of Wight.
It found that colourings in products such as Jammie Dodgers, Smarties and Jelly Tots as well as in fizzy drinks could spark behavioural changes in up to a quarter of children.
(Retrieved from: newspaper Daily Mail, January 8, 2003, p. 19).
Com base no texto, assinale a alternativa correta.
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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
A crítica de filme abaixo é referência para a questão.
Frozen is a 2013 American 3D computer-animated musical fantasy-comedy film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. It is the 53rd animated feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series. Loosely based on Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale The Snow Queen, and featuring the voices of Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel, Jonathan Groff, Josh Gad, and Santino Fontana, the film tells the story of a fearless princess who sets off on an epic journey alongside a rugged, thrill-seeking mountain man, his loyal pet reindeer, and an unfortunate snowman to find her estranged sister, whose icy powers have trapped the kingdom in eternal winter.
The film underwent several story treatments for several years, before being commissioned in 2011, with a screenplay written by Jennifer Lee, and both Chris Buck and Lee serving as directors. Christophe Beck, who had worked on Disney's award-winning short Paperman, was hired to compose the film's orchestral score, while husband-and-wife songwriting team Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez composed the songs.
Frozen premiered at the El Capitan Theatre on November 19, 2013, and went into general theatrical release on November 27. The film has so far grossed $763 million in worldwide box office revenue, $336 million of which has been earned in the United States and Canada; it was met with widespread critical acclaim, with several film critics considering it to be the best Disney animated musical since the studio's renaissance era. The film won the Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film and two Critics' Choice Awards for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song for "Let It Go", and has received Academy Award, BAFTA, Annie Award, and Satellite Award nominations.
(Adapted from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frozen_(2013_film) Access on January 22nd, 2014).
No texto, o termo “which” se refere a:
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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
O trecho a seguir, extraído do livro English as a global language de David Crystal [1997], 2003, é referência para a questão.
What is a global language?
“A language achieves a genuinely global status when it develops a special role that is recognized in every country. This might seem like stating the obvious, but it is not, for the notion of ‘special role’ has many facets. Such a role will be most evident in countries where large numbers of the people speak the language as a mother tongue – in the case of English, this would mean the USA, Canada, Britain, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, several Caribbean countries and a sprinkling of other territories. However, no language has ever been spoken by a mother-tongue majority in more than a few countries (Spanish leads, in this respect, in some twenty countries, chiefly in Latin America), so mother-tongue use by itself cannot give a language global status. To achieve such a status, a language has to be taken up by other countries around the world. They must decide to give it a special place within their communities, even though they may have few (or no) mother-tongue speakers.
There are two main ways in which this can be done. Firstly, a language can be made the official language of a country, to be used as a medium of communication in such domains as government, the law courts, the media, and the educational system. To get on in these societies, it is essential to master the official language as early in life as possible. Such a language is often described as a ‘second language’, because it is seen as a complement to a person’s mother tongue, or ‘first language’. The role of an official language is today best illustrated by English, which now has some kind of special status in over seventy countries, such as Ghana, Nigeria, India, Singapore and Vanuatu. This is far more than the status achieved by any other language – though French, German, Spanish, Russian and Arabic are among those which have also developed a considerable official use. New political decisions on the matter continue to be made: for example, Rwanda gave English official status in 1996.
Secondly, a language can be made priority in a country’s foreign-language teaching, even though this language has no official status. It becomes the language which children are most likely to be taught when they arrive in school, and the one most available to adults who – for whatever reason – never learned it, or learned it badly, in their early educational years. Russian, for example, held privileged status for many years among the countries of the former Soviet Union. Mandarin Chinese continues to play an important role in South-east Asia. English is now the language most widely taught as a foreign language – in over 100 countries, such as China, Russia, Germany, Spain, Egypt and Brazil – and in most of these countries it is emerging as the chief foreign language to be encountered in schools, often displacing another language in the process. In 1996, for example, English replaced French as the chief foreign language in schools in Algeria (a former French colony).
In reflecting on these observations, it is important to note that there are several ways in which a language can be official. It may be the sole language of a country, or it may share this status with other languages. And it may have a ‘semi-official’ status, being used only in certain domains, or taking second place to other languages while still performing certain official roles. Many countries formally acknowledge a language’s status in their constitution (e.g. India); some make no special mention of it (e.g. Britain). In certain countries, the question of whether the special status should be legally recognized is a source of considerable controversy – notably, in the USA.” (. . .)
(CRYSTAL, David. English as a global Language. Cambridge: CUP, [1997] 2003, p. 03-05.)
Para ser considerada língua global, uma língua precisa:
1. desempenhar um papel que é reconhecido em cada país.
2. ser a língua materna falada na maioria dos países.
3. ser usada nos meios de comunicação e na esfera política.
4. exercer papel dominante nos meios de comunicação.
5. ser a única língua falada em determinado país.
Assinale a alternativa correta.
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
A crítica de filme abaixo é referência para a questão.
Frozen is a 2013 American 3D computer-animated musical fantasy-comedy film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. It is the 53rd animated feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series. Loosely based on Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale The Snow Queen, and featuring the voices of Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel, Jonathan Groff, Josh Gad, and Santino Fontana, the film tells the story of a fearless princess who sets off on an epic journey alongside a rugged, thrill-seeking mountain man, his loyal pet reindeer, and an unfortunate snowman to find her estranged sister, whose icy powers have trapped the kingdom in eternal winter.
The film underwent several story treatments for several years, before being commissioned in 2011, with a screenplay written by Jennifer Lee, and both Chris Buck and Lee serving as directors. Christophe Beck, who had worked on Disney's award-winning short Paperman, was hired to compose the film's orchestral score, while husband-and-wife songwriting team Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez composed the songs.
Frozen premiered at the El Capitan Theatre on November 19, 2013, and went into general theatrical release on November 27. The film has so far grossed $763 million in worldwide box office revenue, $336 million of which has been earned in the United States and Canada; it was met with widespread critical acclaim, with several film critics considering it to be the best Disney animated musical since the studio's renaissance era. The film won the Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film and two Critics' Choice Awards for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song for "Let It Go", and has received Academy Award, BAFTA, Annie Award, and Satellite Award nominations.
(Adapted from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frozen_(2013_film) Access on January 22nd, 2014).
De acordo com o texto, é correto afirmar que:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
O texto abaixo é referência para a questão.
Fizzy drinks ‘disrupt children’s sleep’
It is something parents have long suspected – now scientists have confirmed that fizzy drinks affect children’s behaviour.
Teenagers who drink more caffeinated soft drinks sleep less, are more likely to wake during the night and tend to be sleepier during the day, a study has found.
And with one in eight teenagers now drinking more than 22 cans of cola a week, the findings will add to concerns about the effects on their health.
It will also lead to calls for schools to withdraw their lucrative drinks vending machines.
The experts tracked nearly 200 teenagers, aged 14 to 16, for two weeks, recording their sleep patterns and daily intake of caffeinated drinks and foods.
The average daily intake of caffeine was just 63mg, equivalent to half a cup of coffee, but some of the teenagers in the study were taking in up to 800mg.
Boys tended to consume more caffeine than girls – about 70mg daily, compared with 55mg.
Those who reported higher intakes of caffeine had disrupted sleep patterns – being more likely to wake during the night and to sleep for less time. But during the day, the same teenagers tended to be sleepier. The experts say the result means that even small amounts of caffeine can affect children, and soft drinks vending machines should be banned from schools.
The study, published in the journal Paediatrics today, was led by Dr. Charles Pollack of Ohio State University in the U.S.
He said: “The increasing availability of soft drink dispensing machines in schools is apparently welcomed by students and is profitable to school boards, but our findings suggest that it may be interfering with the night-time sleep of teenagers”.
Dr. Pollack said the time may come when soft drinks manufacturers would be forced to either limit the caffeine content in their products or not target children with them.
The research adds to the findings of a UK study published in October, which concluded that additives used in hundreds of children’s foods and drinks can cause disruptive behaviour.
The Government-funded report involved 227 three-year-olds from the Isle of Wight.
It found that colourings in products such as Jammie Dodgers, Smarties and Jelly Tots as well as in fizzy drinks could spark behavioural changes in up to a quarter of children.
(Retrieved from: newspaper Daily Mail, January 8, 2003, p. 19).
Podemos mudar a palavra “findings” por um sinônimo sem prejudicar o sentido do texto. Esse sinônimo seria:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
A crítica de filme abaixo é referência para a questão.
Frozen is a 2013 American 3D computer-animated musical fantasy-comedy film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. It is the 53rd animated feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series. Loosely based on Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale The Snow Queen, and featuring the voices of Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel, Jonathan Groff, Josh Gad, and Santino Fontana, the film tells the story of a fearless princess who sets off on an epic journey alongside a rugged, thrill-seeking mountain man, his loyal pet reindeer, and an unfortunate snowman to find her estranged sister, whose icy powers have trapped the kingdom in eternal winter.
The film underwent several story treatments for several years, before being commissioned in 2011, with a screenplay written by Jennifer Lee, and both Chris Buck and Lee serving as directors. Christophe Beck, who had worked on Disney's award-winning short Paperman, was hired to compose the film's orchestral score, while husband-and-wife songwriting team Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez composed the songs.
Frozen premiered at the El Capitan Theatre on November 19, 2013, and went into general theatrical release on November 27. The film has so far grossed $763 million in worldwide box office revenue, $336 million of which has been earned in the United States and Canada; it was met with widespread critical acclaim, with several film critics considering it to be the best Disney animated musical since the studio's renaissance era. The film won the Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film and two Critics' Choice Awards for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song for "Let It Go", and has received Academy Award, BAFTA, Annie Award, and Satellite Award nominations.
(Adapted from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frozen_(2013_film) Access on January 22nd, 2014).
No texto, o termo “featuring” pode ser substituído por outro termo, sem prejuízo na compreensão. Esse termo é:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
O texto abaixo é referência para a questão.
Fizzy drinks ‘disrupt children’s sleep’
It is something parents have long suspected – now scientists have confirmed that fizzy drinks affect children’s behaviour.
Teenagers who drink more caffeinated soft drinks sleep less, are more likely to wake during the night and tend to be sleepier during the day, a study has found.
And with one in eight teenagers now drinking more than 22 cans of cola a week, the findings will add to concerns about the effects on their health.
It will also lead to calls for schools to withdraw their lucrative drinks vending machines.
The experts tracked nearly 200 teenagers, aged 14 to 16, for two weeks, recording their sleep patterns and daily intake of caffeinated drinks and foods.
The average daily intake of caffeine was just 63mg, equivalent to half a cup of coffee, but some of the teenagers in the study were taking in up to 800mg.
Boys tended to consume more caffeine than girls – about 70mg daily, compared with 55mg.
Those who reported higher intakes of caffeine had disrupted sleep patterns – being more likely to wake during the night and to sleep for less time. But during the day, the same teenagers tended to be sleepier. The experts say the result means that even small amounts of caffeine can affect children, and soft drinks vending machines should be banned from schools.
The study, published in the journal Paediatrics today, was led by Dr. Charles Pollack of Ohio State University in the U.S.
He said: “The increasing availability of soft drink dispensing machines in schools is apparently welcomed by students and is profitable to school boards, but our findings suggest that it may be interfering with the night-time sleep of teenagers”.
Dr. Pollack said the time may come when soft drinks manufacturers would be forced to either limit the caffeine content in their products or not target children with them.
The research adds to the findings of a UK study published in October, which concluded that additives used in hundreds of children’s foods and drinks can cause disruptive behaviour.
The Government-funded report involved 227 three-year-olds from the Isle of Wight.
It found that colourings in products such as Jammie Dodgers, Smarties and Jelly Tots as well as in fizzy drinks could spark behavioural changes in up to a quarter of children.
(Retrieved from: newspaper Daily Mail, January 8, 2003, p. 19).
É possível inferir do texto que o grande problema em relação ao consumo excessivo de cafeína por parte de crianças se deve:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
O texto a seguir é referência para a questão.
Local Tours
Kenya appears in many brochures. The Kenyan government has made tourist development a priority. It has spent money on building hotels, airports, safari lodges and all the other requirements for tourists from developed countries. The planes landing at Nairobi airport bring rich tourists from Europe, North America and Japan. Some come for Kenya’s fine beaches. Most are interested in the wildlife of East Africa. Lions, cheetahs, elephants and hippopotamuses are among the attractions.
Kenya’s tourist industry earns the country over £200 million per year, but tourism does bring problems for a developing country.
• Only 75% of the money spent by tourists stays in Kenya. The rest is taken by foreign companies which provide the hotels and the safaris.
• The tourist drinks Scotch whisky or Russian vodka. The hotels are fitted with American air-conditioning and Japanese lifts. The electrical system is Dutch and the fire control system is Italian. The safari vehicles are Japanese Land Cruisers. These imports cost Kenya vital foreign exchange.
• Kenya borrowed money from overseas to pay for the tourist developments, and much of the profits from tourism are spent in repaying the loans.
• There have been several armed attacks on tourists. The bad publicity hit Kenya’s tourist earnings because people were frightened off. It is risky to become over-dependent upon tourism.
Most of the jobs created for Kenyans are unskilled and poorly paid. Some complain that tourism is a new form of colonialism. Tourism has also come into conflict with Kenya’s rapid population growth. More mouths to feed means more demand for farmland. Already some Kenyans are demanding that the National Parks be opened up for farming.
(Retrieved from: STOTT, Trish & HOLT, Roger. First class. English for tourism. Oxford: OUP, 1995. (p. 71)
O termo “unskilled” pode ser substituído por um sinônimo, sem prejuízo na compreensão da ideia. Esse sinônimo é:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
O texto abaixo é referência para a questão.
Fizzy drinks ‘disrupt children’s sleep’
It is something parents have long suspected – now scientists have confirmed that fizzy drinks affect children’s behaviour.
Teenagers who drink more caffeinated soft drinks sleep less, are more likely to wake during the night and tend to be sleepier during the day, a study has found.
And with one in eight teenagers now drinking more than 22 cans of cola a week, the findings will add to concerns about the effects on their health.
It will also lead to calls for schools to withdraw their lucrative drinks vending machines.
The experts tracked nearly 200 teenagers, aged 14 to 16, for two weeks, recording their sleep patterns and daily intake of caffeinated drinks and foods.
The average daily intake of caffeine was just 63mg, equivalent to half a cup of coffee, but some of the teenagers in the study were taking in up to 800mg.
Boys tended to consume more caffeine than girls – about 70mg daily, compared with 55mg.
Those who reported higher intakes of caffeine had disrupted sleep patterns – being more likely to wake during the night and to sleep for less time. But during the day, the same teenagers tended to be sleepier. The experts say the result means that even small amounts of caffeine can affect children, and soft drinks vending machines should be banned from schools.
The study, published in the journal Paediatrics today, was led by Dr. Charles Pollack of Ohio State University in the U.S.
He said: “The increasing availability of soft drink dispensing machines in schools is apparently welcomed by students and is profitable to school boards, but our findings suggest that it may be interfering with the night-time sleep of teenagers”.
Dr. Pollack said the time may come when soft drinks manufacturers would be forced to either limit the caffeine content in their products or not target children with them.
The research adds to the findings of a UK study published in October, which concluded that additives used in hundreds of children’s foods and drinks can cause disruptive behaviour.
The Government-funded report involved 227 three-year-olds from the Isle of Wight.
It found that colourings in products such as Jammie Dodgers, Smarties and Jelly Tots as well as in fizzy drinks could spark behavioural changes in up to a quarter of children.
(Retrieved from: newspaper Daily Mail, January 8, 2003, p. 19).
Podemos mudar a palavra “lucrative” por um sinônimo sem prejudicar o sentido do texto. Esse sinônimo seria:
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