Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 225 questões.

504666 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Administração Financeira e Orçamentária
Banca: FADESP
Orgão: CDSA
Provas:
O plano plurianual, as diretrizes orçamentárias e os orçamentos anuais são estabelecidos por leis de iniciativa do(da)
I. Congresso Nacional;
II. Poder Executivo;
III. Câmara dos Deputados;
IV. Senado Federal.
- Considerando as informações contidas nos itens acima, é correto afirmar que
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
504637 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: TI - Organização e Arquitetura dos Computadores
Banca: FADESP
Orgão: CDSA
Provas:
Analise o tipo de socket numa placa mãe:
a) Suporta dois canais de memória do tipo DDR2;
b) Pode ser utilizado em processadores AMD, em versões, por exemplo: Athlon 64 FX; e Sempron;
c) Possui 940 pinos.
O tipo de socket que apresenta as características acima é o
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
497410 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Direito Marítimo e Portuário
Banca: FADESP
Orgão: CDSA
De acordo com a Lei 12.815/2013, dentre outras atribuições, ao órgão de gestão de mão de obra do trabalho portuário avulso compete aplicar a pena de suspensão do registro pelo período de
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
495112 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FADESP
Orgão: CDSA
Is Breakfast Overrated?
By Gretchen Reynolds
August 21, 2014
For years, we’ve heard that breakfast is the most important meal of the day. But scientific support for that idea has been surprisingly meager, and a spate of new research at several different universities — published in multiple articles in the August issue of The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition — could change the way we think about early-hours eating.
The largest and most provocative of the studies focused on whether breakfast plays a role in weight loss. Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and other institutions recruited nearly 300 volunteers who were trying to lose weight. They randomly assigned subjects to either skip breakfast, always eat the meal or continue with their current dietary habits. (Each group contained people who habitually ate or skipped breakfast at the start, so some changed habits, and others did not.)
Sixteen weeks later, the volunteers returned to the lab to be weighed. No one had lost much, only a pound or so per person, with weight in all groups unaffected by whether someone ate breakfast or skipped it.
In another new study — this one of lean volunteers — researchers at the University of Bath determined the resting metabolic rates, cholesterol levels and blood-sugar profiles of 33 participants and randomly assigned them to eat or skip breakfast. Volunteers were then provided with activity monitors.
After six weeks, their body weights, resting metabolic rates, cholesterol and most measures of blood sugar were about the same as they had been at the start, whether people ate breakfast or not. The one difference was that the breakfast eaters seemed to move around more during the morning; their activity monitors showed that volunteers in this group burned almost 500 calories more in light-intensity movement. But by eating breakfast, they also consumed an additional 500 calories each day. Contrary to popular belief, skipping breakfast had not driven volunteers to wolf down enormous lunches and dinners — but it had made them somewhat more sluggish first thing in the morning.
Together, the new research suggests that in terms of weight loss, “breakfast may be just another meal,” said Emily Dhurandhar, the assistant professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham who led the study there. Skipping breakfast in these studies, she said, did not fatten people.
Each study was fairly short-term, however, and involved a limited range of volunteers. More randomized experiments are needed before we can fully understand the impact of breakfast, said James Betts, the professor who led the study of lean people. It’s not yet clear, for instance, whether heavy people’s bodies respond differently to morning meals than lean people’s, or if the timing and makeup of breakfast matters.
For now, the slightly unsatisfying takeaway from the new science would seem to be that if you like breakfast, fine; but if not, don’t sweat it. “I almost never have breakfast,” Dr. Betts said. “That was part of my motivation for conducting this research, as everybody was always telling me off and saying I should know better.” Based on the results of these studies, he said his habits won’t change.
Neither will those of Dr. Dhurandhar, who enjoys a morning meal. But, she said, “I guess I won’t nag my husband to eat breakfast anymore.”
(http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/08/21/is-breakfast-overrated/??src=dayp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=ccolumn- above-moth-fixed-region&region=c-column-above-moth-fixed-region&WT.nav=c-column-above-moth-fixed-region)
Comparing the first study to the second one referred to in the text, we may say that
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
491614 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Direito Constitucional
Banca: FADESP
Orgão: CDSA
Provas:

Segundo a Constituição Federal é vedado aos Municípios

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
491584 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Informática
Banca: FADESP
Orgão: CDSA
No Microsoft Office Excel 2010, é possível salvar um arquivo no formato padrão “pasta de trabalho do Excel” (*.xlsx). Um arquivo também poder ser salvo em outros formatos, exceto:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
491433 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Segurança Privada e Transportes
Banca: FADESP
Orgão: CDSA
Provas:
Na movimentação de cargas com guindastes, não é correto que os operadores das máquinas e auxiliares utilizem os sinais de
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
491427 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Português
Banca: FADESP
Orgão: CDSA
Dois tipos de ideias
Há dois tipos de ideias: ideias inertes e ideias com poder gravitacional. As ideias inertes, como o nome está dizendo, são destituídas de poder. Estão onde estão e isso é tudo. Como pedras. A maior parte das ideias que se ensinam nas escolas pertence a essa categoria. Um bom exemplo se encontra naquele parágrafo do livro de biologia que minha neta tinha de aprender. Via de regra, essas ideias são logo esquecidas. A memória as deleta e joga na lixeira. Algumas permanecem na memória consciente como lixo. Por exemplo, aprendi no curso de admissão que a ilha de Tupinambarana é a segunda maior ilha fluvial do mundo. Essa informação não faz nada com a minha cabeça. Note-se que as ideias inertes, frequentemente, possuem os critérios cartesianos de clareza e distinção. As ideias com poder gravitacional são aquelas que têm o poder de chamar outras. Elas nunca estão sozinhas. São sóis do sistema solar que é a nossa mente. Elas produzem big bang na cabeça do qual nascem universos. É assim que acontecem a poesia, a literatura, a música: uma única ideia explode e eis a obra!
ALVES, Rubens. Ostra feliz não faz pérola. São Paulo: Editora Planeta do Brasil, 2008, p. 118-119.
O propósito do autor é, sobretudo,
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
491319 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FADESP
Orgão: CDSA
Is Breakfast Overrated?
By Gretchen Reynolds
August 21, 2014
For years, we’ve heard that breakfast is the most important meal of the day. But scientific support for that idea has been surprisingly meager, and a spate of new research at several different universities — published in multiple articles in the August issue of The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition — could change the way we think about early-hours eating.
The largest and most provocative of the studies focused on whether breakfast plays a role in weight loss. Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and other institutions recruited nearly 300 volunteers who were trying to lose weight. They randomly assigned subjects to either skip breakfast, always eat the meal or continue with their current dietary habits. (Each group contained people who habitually ate or skipped breakfast at the start, so some changed habits, and others did not.)
Sixteen weeks later, the volunteers returned to the lab to be weighed. No one had lost much, only a pound or so per person, with weight in all groups unaffected by whether someone ate breakfast or skipped it.
In another new study — this one of lean volunteers — researchers at the University of Bath determined the resting metabolic rates, cholesterol levels and blood-sugar profiles of 33 participants and randomly assigned them to eat or skip breakfast. Volunteers were then provided with activity monitors.
After six weeks, their body weights, resting metabolic rates, cholesterol and most measures of blood sugar were about the same as they had been at the start, whether people ate breakfast or not. The one difference was that the breakfast eaters seemed to move around more during the morning; their activity monitors showed that volunteers in this group burned almost 500 calories more in light-intensity movement. But by eating breakfast, they also consumed an additional 500 calories each day. Contrary to popular belief, skipping breakfast had not driven volunteers to wolf down enormous lunches and dinners — but it had made them somewhat more sluggish first thing in the morning.
Together, the new research suggests that in terms of weight loss, “breakfast may be just another meal,” said Emily Dhurandhar, the assistant professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham who led the study there. Skipping breakfast in these studies, she said, did not fatten people.
Each study was fairly short-term, however, and involved a limited range of volunteers. More randomized experiments are needed before we can fully understand the impact of breakfast, said James Betts, the professor who led the study of lean people. It’s not yet clear, for instance, whether heavy people’s bodies respond differently to morning meals than lean people’s, or if the timing and makeup of breakfast matters.
For now, the slightly unsatisfying takeaway from the new science would seem to be that if you like breakfast, fine; but if not, don’t sweat it. “I almost never have breakfast,” Dr. Betts said. “That was part of my motivation for conducting this research, as everybody was always telling me off and saying I should know better.” Based on the results of these studies, he said his habits won’t change.
Neither will those of Dr. Dhurandhar, who enjoys a morning meal. But, she said, “I guess I won’t nag my husband to eat breakfast anymore.”
(http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/08/21/is-breakfast-overrated/??src=dayp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=ccolumn- above-moth-fixed-region&region=c-column-above-moth-fixed-region&WT.nav=c-column-above-moth-fixed-region)
The findings of the experiments referred to in the text
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
487040 Ano: 2014
Disciplina: Segurança Privada e Transportes
Banca: FADESP
Orgão: CDSA
Provas:
Acidentes de trabalho precisam ser evitados, principalmente em maquinários pesados. Considerando isso, na operação com guindaste em presença de ventos fortes, deve-se
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas