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Catar feijão
1 Catar feijão se limita com escrever:
joga-se os grãos na água do alguidar
e as palavras na folha de papel;
4 e depois, joga-se fora o que boiar.
Certo, toda palavra boiará no papel,
água congelada, por chumbo seu verbo:
7 pois para catar esse feijão, soprar nele,
e jogar fora o leve e oco, palha e eco.
10 Ora, nesse catar feijão entra um risco:
o de que entre os grãos pesados entre
um grão qualquer, pedra ou indigesto,
13 um grão imastigável, de quebrar dente.
Certo não, quando ao catar palavras:
a pedra dá à frase seu grão mais vivo:
16 obstrui a leitura fluviante, flutual,
açula a atenção, isca-a como o risco.
João Cabral de Melo Neto. A educação pela pedra. Rio de Janeiro: Nova Fronteira, 1997.
Considerando as propriedades linguísticas e os sentidos do poema precedente, julgue os próximos itens.
Haja vista as situações apresentadas no poema, a expressão “catar feijão” tem tanto sentido denotativo quanto conotativo.
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: Pref. São Cristóvão-SE
Avoid skin-lightening creams ‘at all costs’
Consumers are being warned to steer clear of skin lightening creams that can “act like paint stripper”. Many contained the bleaching agent hydroquinone the creams can also contain mercury.
The British Skin Foundation said people should speak to a doctor if they had any concerns about their skin. The LGA says the toxic products are being sold by rogue retailers, as well as online and at car boot sales and market stalls. And they do not always spell out the correct levels of ingredients, putting consumers at risk.
Hydroquinone, described by the LGA as “the biological equivalent of paint stripper”, can remove the top layer of skin, increasing the risk of skin cancer, and cause fatal liver and kidney damage. Mercury can cause similar life-threatening health problems.
Unless they are issued on prescription by a doctor, creams containing hydroquinone, steroids or mercury are banned in the UK because of their potentially serious side-effects.
The LGA highlighted several recent seizures including the seizure of 360 products from a store in Dagenham, some of which contained hydroquinone. Ingredients were listed incorrectly and failed to meet EU regulations. The store’s owners were fined £6,500 and ordered to pay £8,010 to the council.
Southwark Council seized about 2,900 skin-whitening products, most of which had been imported directly from Nigeria, in a single raid in 2018. It also saw what is believed to be the UK’s first jail sentence for the sale of dangerous skin lightening products.
A quarter of a tonne of illegal skin lightening products were seized at Gatwick Airport after arriving from Cameroon. Samples were found to contain hydroquinone.
Simon Blackburn, chairman of the LGA’s Safer and Stronger Communities Board, said: “Skin creams containing banned ingredients are very dangerous and could seriously damage your health, scar you for life and even kill you, so they should be avoided at all costs.”
Consumers should always check the ingredients of their skin creams, be suspicious of very low prices which are likely to indicate the lotion is fake and potentially harmful, and never use a product containing hydroquinone. “If the product doesn’t display the ingredients at all, then don’t use it.”
Internet: www.bbc.com (adapted).
No que se refere às ideias do texto apresentado, julgue os itens a seguir.
Although these products may cause harm to a person’s skin and health, they are considered inoffensive to people’s lives.
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: Pref. São Cristóvão-SE
Avoid skin-lightening creams ‘at all costs’
Consumers are being warned to steer clear of skin lightening creams that can “act like paint stripper”. Many contained the bleaching agent hydroquinone the creams can also contain mercury.
The British Skin Foundation said people should speak to a doctor if they had any concerns about their skin. The LGA says the toxic products are being sold by rogue retailers, as well as online and at car boot sales and market stalls. And they do not always spell out the correct levels of ingredients, putting consumers at risk.
Hydroquinone, described by the LGA as “the biological equivalent of paint stripper”, can remove the top layer of skin, increasing the risk of skin cancer, and cause fatal liver and kidney damage. Mercury can cause similar life-threatening health problems.
Unless they are issued on prescription by a doctor, creams containing hydroquinone, steroids or mercury are banned in the UK because of their potentially serious side-effects.
The LGA highlighted several recent seizures including the seizure of 360 products from a store in Dagenham, some of which contained hydroquinone. Ingredients were listed incorrectly and failed to meet EU regulations. The store’s owners were fined £6,500 and ordered to pay £8,010 to the council.
Southwark Council seized about 2,900 skin-whitening products, most of which had been imported directly from Nigeria, in a single raid in 2018. It also saw what is believed to be the UK’s first jail sentence for the sale of dangerous skin lightening products.
A quarter of a tonne of illegal skin lightening products were seized at Gatwick Airport after arriving from Cameroon. Samples were found to contain hydroquinone.
Simon Blackburn, chairman of the LGA’s Safer and Stronger Communities Board, said: “Skin creams containing banned ingredients are very dangerous and could seriously damage your health, scar you for life and even kill you, so they should be avoided at all costs.”
Consumers should always check the ingredients of their skin creams, be suspicious of very low prices which are likely to indicate the lotion is fake and potentially harmful, and never use a product containing hydroquinone. “If the product doesn’t display the ingredients at all, then don’t use it.”
Internet: www.bbc.com (adapted).
No que se refere às ideias do texto apresentado, julgue os itens a seguir.
One authority advises the population to verify which ingredients skin lightening creams contain.
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: Pref. São Cristóvão-SE
Avoid skin-lightening creams ‘at all costs’
Consumers are being warned to steer clear of skin lightening creams that can “act like paint stripper”. Many contained the bleaching agent hydroquinone the creams can also contain mercury.
The British Skin Foundation said people should speak to a doctor if they had any concerns about their skin. The LGA says the toxic products are being sold by rogue retailers, as well as online and at car boot sales and market stalls. And they do not always spell out the correct levels of ingredients, putting consumers at risk.
Hydroquinone, described by the LGA as “the biological equivalent of paint stripper”, can remove the top layer of skin, increasing the risk of skin cancer, and cause fatal liver and kidney damage. Mercury can cause similar life-threatening health problems.
Unless they are issued on prescription by a doctor, creams containing hydroquinone, steroids or mercury are banned in the UK because of their potentially serious side-effects.
The LGA highlighted several recent seizures including the seizure of 360 products from a store in Dagenham, some of which contained hydroquinone. Ingredients were listed incorrectly and failed to meet EU regulations. The store’s owners were fined £6,500 and ordered to pay £8,010 to the council.
Southwark Council seized about 2,900 skin-whitening products, most of which had been imported directly from Nigeria, in a single raid in 2018. It also saw what is believed to be the UK’s first jail sentence for the sale of dangerous skin lightening products.
A quarter of a tonne of illegal skin lightening products were seized at Gatwick Airport after arriving from Cameroon. Samples were found to contain hydroquinone.
Simon Blackburn, chairman of the LGA’s Safer and Stronger Communities Board, said: “Skin creams containing banned ingredients are very dangerous and could seriously damage your health, scar you for life and even kill you, so they should be avoided at all costs.”
Consumers should always check the ingredients of their skin creams, be suspicious of very low prices which are likely to indicate the lotion is fake and potentially harmful, and never use a product containing hydroquinone. “If the product doesn’t display the ingredients at all, then don’t use it.”
Internet: www.bbc.com (adapted).
No que se refere às ideias do texto apresentado, julgue os itens a seguir.
The products seized by the authorities came from Africa.
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: Pref. São Cristóvão-SE
Avoid skin-lightening creams ‘at all costs’
Consumers are being warned to steer clear of skin lightening creams that can “act like paint stripper”. Many contained the bleaching agent hydroquinone the creams can also contain mercury.
The British Skin Foundation said people should speak to a doctor if they had any concerns about their skin. The LGA says the toxic products are being sold by rogue retailers, as well as online and at car boot sales and market stalls. And they do not always spell out the correct levels of ingredients, putting consumers at risk.
Hydroquinone, described by the LGA as “the biological equivalent of paint stripper”, can remove the top layer of skin, increasing the risk of skin cancer, and cause fatal liver and kidney damage. Mercury can cause similar life-threatening health problems.
Unless they are issued on prescription by a doctor, creams containing hydroquinone, steroids or mercury are banned in the UK because of their potentially serious side-effects.
The LGA highlighted several recent seizures including the seizure of 360 products from a store in Dagenham, some of which contained hydroquinone. Ingredients were listed incorrectly and failed to meet EU regulations. The store’s owners were fined £6,500 and ordered to pay £8,010 to the council.
Southwark Council seized about 2,900 skin-whitening products, most of which had been imported directly from Nigeria, in a single raid in 2018. It also saw what is believed to be the UK’s first jail sentence for the sale of dangerous skin lightening products.
A quarter of a tonne of illegal skin lightening products were seized at Gatwick Airport after arriving from Cameroon. Samples were found to contain hydroquinone.
Simon Blackburn, chairman of the LGA’s Safer and Stronger Communities Board, said: “Skin creams containing banned ingredients are very dangerous and could seriously damage your health, scar you for life and even kill you, so they should be avoided at all costs.”
Consumers should always check the ingredients of their skin creams, be suspicious of very low prices which are likely to indicate the lotion is fake and potentially harmful, and never use a product containing hydroquinone. “If the product doesn’t display the ingredients at all, then don’t use it.”
Internet: www.bbc.com (adapted).
No que se refere às ideias do texto apresentado, julgue os itens a seguir.
The skin lightening creams seized met EU regulations in many cases.
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: Pref. São Cristóvão-SE
Avoid skin-lightening creams ‘at all costs’
Consumers are being warned to steer clear of skin lightening creams that can “act like paint stripper”. Many contained the bleaching agent hydroquinone the creams can also contain mercury.
The British Skin Foundation said people should speak to a doctor if they had any concerns about their skin. The LGA says the toxic products are being sold by rogue retailers, as well as online and at car boot sales and market stalls. And they do not always spell out the correct levels of ingredients, putting consumers at risk.
Hydroquinone, described by the LGA as “the biological equivalent of paint stripper”, can remove the top layer of skin, increasing the risk of skin cancer, and cause fatal liver and kidney damage. Mercury can cause similar life-threatening health problems.
Unless they are issued on prescription by a doctor, creams containing hydroquinone, steroids or mercury are banned in the UK because of their potentially serious side-effects.
The LGA highlighted several recent seizures including the seizure of 360 products from a store in Dagenham, some of which contained hydroquinone. Ingredients were listed incorrectly and failed to meet EU regulations. The store’s owners were fined £6,500 and ordered to pay £8,010 to the council.
Southwark Council seized about 2,900 skin-whitening products, most of which had been imported directly from Nigeria, in a single raid in 2018. It also saw what is believed to be the UK’s first jail sentence for the sale of dangerous skin lightening products.
A quarter of a tonne of illegal skin lightening products were seized at Gatwick Airport after arriving from Cameroon. Samples were found to contain hydroquinone.
Simon Blackburn, chairman of the LGA’s Safer and Stronger Communities Board, said: “Skin creams containing banned ingredients are very dangerous and could seriously damage your health, scar you for life and even kill you, so they should be avoided at all costs.”
Consumers should always check the ingredients of their skin creams, be suspicious of very low prices which are likely to indicate the lotion is fake and potentially harmful, and never use a product containing hydroquinone. “If the product doesn’t display the ingredients at all, then don’t use it.”
Internet: www.bbc.com (adapted).
No que se refere às ideias do texto apresentado, julgue os itens a seguir.
The product being warned by the LGA is believed to cause damage to at least two organs.
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: Pref. São Cristóvão-SE
Avoid skin-lightening creams ‘at all costs’
Consumers are being warned to steer clear of skin lightening creams that can “act like paint stripper”. Many contained the bleaching agent hydroquinone the creams can also contain mercury.
The British Skin Foundation said people should speak to a doctor if they had any concerns about their skin. The LGA says the toxic products are being sold by rogue retailers, as well as online and at car boot sales and market stalls. And they do not always spell out the correct levels of ingredients, putting consumers at risk.
Hydroquinone, described by the LGA as “the biological equivalent of paint stripper”, can remove the top layer of skin, increasing the risk of skin cancer, and cause fatal liver and kidney damage. Mercury can cause similar life-threatening health problems.
Unless they are issued on prescription by a doctor, creams containing hydroquinone, steroids or mercury are banned in the UK because of their potentially serious side-effects.
The LGA highlighted several recent seizures including the seizure of 360 products from a store in Dagenham, some of which contained hydroquinone. Ingredients were listed incorrectly and failed to meet EU regulations. The store’s owners were fined £6,500 and ordered to pay £8,010 to the council.
Southwark Council seized about 2,900 skin-whitening products, most of which had been imported directly from Nigeria, in a single raid in 2018. It also saw what is believed to be the UK’s first jail sentence for the sale of dangerous skin lightening products.
A quarter of a tonne of illegal skin lightening products were seized at Gatwick Airport after arriving from Cameroon. Samples were found to contain hydroquinone.
Simon Blackburn, chairman of the LGA’s Safer and Stronger Communities Board, said: “Skin creams containing banned ingredients are very dangerous and could seriously damage your health, scar you for life and even kill you, so they should be avoided at all costs.”
Consumers should always check the ingredients of their skin creams, be suspicious of very low prices which are likely to indicate the lotion is fake and potentially harmful, and never use a product containing hydroquinone. “If the product doesn’t display the ingredients at all, then don’t use it.”
Internet: www.bbc.com (adapted).
No que se refere às ideias do texto apresentado, julgue os itens a seguir.
The skin lightening creams mentioned in the text are compared to products which remove paint from walls and other surfaces.
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: Pref. São Cristóvão-SE
Avoid skin-lightening creams ‘at all costs’
Consumers are being warned to steer clear of skin lightening creams that can “act like paint stripper”. Many contained the bleaching agent hydroquinone the creams can also contain mercury.
The British Skin Foundation said people should speak to a doctor if they had any concerns about their skin. The LGA says the toxic products are being sold by rogue retailers, as well as online and at car boot sales and market stalls. And they do not always spell out the correct levels of ingredients, putting consumers at risk.
Hydroquinone, described by the LGA as “the biological equivalent of paint stripper”, can remove the top layer of skin, increasing the risk of skin cancer, and cause fatal liver and kidney damage. Mercury can cause similar life-threatening health problems.
Unless they are issued on prescription by a doctor, creams containing hydroquinone, steroids or mercury are banned in the UK because of their potentially serious side-effects.
The LGA highlighted several recent seizures including the seizure of 360 products from a store in Dagenham, some of which contained hydroquinone. Ingredients were listed incorrectly and failed to meet EU regulations. The store’s owners were fined £6,500 and ordered to pay £8,010 to the council.
Southwark Council seized about 2,900 skin-whitening products, most of which had been imported directly from Nigeria, in a single raid in 2018. It also saw what is believed to be the UK’s first jail sentence for the sale of dangerous skin lightening products.
A quarter of a tonne of illegal skin lightening products were seized at Gatwick Airport after arriving from Cameroon. Samples were found to contain hydroquinone.
Simon Blackburn, chairman of the LGA’s Safer and Stronger Communities Board, said: “Skin creams containing banned ingredients are very dangerous and could seriously damage your health, scar you for life and even kill you, so they should be avoided at all costs.”
Consumers should always check the ingredients of their skin creams, be suspicious of very low prices which are likely to indicate the lotion is fake and potentially harmful, and never use a product containing hydroquinone. “If the product doesn’t display the ingredients at all, then don’t use it.”
Internet: www.bbc.com (adapted).
No que se refere às ideias do texto apresentado, julgue os itens a seguir.
The illegal products mentioned in the text are sold informally both online and on the streets, without much surveillance.
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: Pref. São Cristóvão-SE
Avoid skin-lightening creams ‘at all costs’
Consumers are being warned to steer clear of skin lightening creams that can “act like paint stripper”. Many contained the bleaching agent hydroquinone the creams can also contain mercury.
The British Skin Foundation said people should speak to a doctor if they had any concerns about their skin. The LGA says the toxic products are being sold by rogue retailers, as well as online and at car boot sales and market stalls. And they do not always spell out the correct levels of ingredients, putting consumers at risk.
Hydroquinone, described by the LGA as “the biological equivalent of paint stripper”, can remove the top layer of skin, increasing the risk of skin cancer, and cause fatal liver and kidney damage. Mercury can cause similar life-threatening health problems.
Unless they are issued on prescription by a doctor, creams containing hydroquinone, steroids or mercury are banned in the UK because of their potentially serious side-effects.
The LGA highlighted several recent seizures including the seizure of 360 products from a store in Dagenham, some of which contained hydroquinone. Ingredients were listed incorrectly and failed to meet EU regulations. The store’s owners were fined £6,500 and ordered to pay £8,010 to the council.
Southwark Council seized about 2,900 skin-whitening products, most of which had been imported directly from Nigeria, in a single raid in 2018. It also saw what is believed to be the UK’s first jail sentence for the sale of dangerous skin lightening products.
A quarter of a tonne of illegal skin lightening products were seized at Gatwick Airport after arriving from Cameroon. Samples were found to contain hydroquinone.
Simon Blackburn, chairman of the LGA’s Safer and Stronger Communities Board, said: “Skin creams containing banned ingredients are very dangerous and could seriously damage your health, scar you for life and even kill you, so they should be avoided at all costs.”
Consumers should always check the ingredients of their skin creams, be suspicious of very low prices which are likely to indicate the lotion is fake and potentially harmful, and never use a product containing hydroquinone. “If the product doesn’t display the ingredients at all, then don’t use it.”
Internet: www.bbc.com (adapted).
No que se refere às ideias do texto apresentado, julgue os itens a seguir.
Only skin lightening creams which contain hydroquinone should be avoided by consumers.
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CESPE / CEBRASPE
Orgão: Pref. São Cristóvão-SE
Avoid skin-lightening creams ‘at all costs’
Consumers are being warned to steer clear of skin lightening creams that can “act like paint stripper”. Many contained the bleaching agent hydroquinone the creams can also contain mercury.
The British Skin Foundation said people should speak to a doctor if they had any concerns about their skin. The LGA says the toxic products are being sold by rogue retailers, as well as online and at car boot sales and market stalls. And they do not always spell out the correct levels of ingredients, putting consumers at risk.
Hydroquinone, described by the LGA as “the biological equivalent of paint stripper”, can remove the top layer of skin, increasing the risk of skin cancer, and cause fatal liver and kidney damage. Mercury can cause similar life-threatening health problems.
Unless they are issued on prescription by a doctor, creams containing hydroquinone, steroids or mercury are banned in the UK because of their potentially serious side-effects.
The LGA highlighted several recent seizures including the seizure of 360 products from a store in Dagenham, some of which contained hydroquinone. Ingredients were listed incorrectly and failed to meet EU regulations. The store’s owners were fined £6,500 and ordered to pay £8,010 to the council.
Southwark Council seized about 2,900 skin-whitening products, most of which had been imported directly from Nigeria, in a single raid in 2018. It also saw what is believed to be the UK’s first jail sentence for the sale of dangerous skin lightening products.
A quarter of a tonne of illegal skin lightening products were seized at Gatwick Airport after arriving from Cameroon. Samples were found to contain hydroquinone.
Simon Blackburn, chairman of the LGA’s Safer and Stronger Communities Board, said: “Skin creams containing banned ingredients are very dangerous and could seriously damage your health, scar you for life and even kill you, so they should be avoided at all costs.”
Consumers should always check the ingredients of their skin creams, be suspicious of very low prices which are likely to indicate the lotion is fake and potentially harmful, and never use a product containing hydroquinone. “If the product doesn’t display the ingredients at all, then don’t use it.”
Internet: www.bbc.com (adapted).
No que se refere às ideias do texto apresentado, julgue os itens a seguir.
The main idea of the text is to show consumers that skin lightening creams contain hydroquinone.
Provas
Caderno Container