Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 90 questões.

3758413 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Marinha
Orgão: Col. Naval
Provas:

Read Text III to answer questions 28 to 31.

TEXT III

Czech star gymnast dies after falling over 200 feet from mountain while attempting to take selfie

By Scott Thompson - Fox News Updated August 26, 2024

The Daily Mail reports that 23-year-old Natalie Stichova was declared dead six days after falling 262 feet down Tegelberg Mountain in Bavaria, Germany, on Aug. 15.

A friend of the gymnast told Czech media that Stichova “was trying to take a selfie when she fell. The person, who wanted to remain anonymous, said Stichova was close to the edge of the mountain when her foot appeared to slip while setting up for a photo in front of the castle.

"We will never find out whether she slipped or whether a piece of the rock edge broke off," the friend said, per the Daily Mail.

Stichova was reportedly with her boyfriend, David, and two friends ______ the time of the incident. Police said it was a challenging climb to reach the gymnast after her fall. Although Stichova was alive when first responders arrived, she was suffering from severe injuries.

The Daily Mail reports Stichova's family took her off life support due to irreversible brain damage ______ Aug. 21. She died ________ 5:30 a.m. that day.

"With deep:sorrow, we announce that our wonderful friend, gymnast, rêpresentative, and coach, Natalie Stichova, has left us forever due to a tragic accident," Stichova's club, Sokol Pribram Sports Gymnastics, said in an official statement, per the Daily Mail, "We are extending our heartfelt condolences to her family and close friends, sending them strength and support.”

Adapted from: <https://www.foxnews.com/sports/czech-star-gymnast-dies-after-falling-over-200-feet-from-mountain-while-attempling-take-selfte-report>.

In the extract “Although Stichova was alive when first responders arrived, she was suffering from severe injuries” (4th paragraph), “although” is used to express:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3758412 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Marinha
Orgão: Col. Naval
Provas:

Read Text III to answer questions 28 to 31.

TEXT III

Czech star gymnast dies after falling over 200 feet from mountain while attempting to take selfie

By Scott Thompson - Fox News Updated August 26, 2024

The Daily Mail reports that 23-year-old Natalie Stichova was declared dead six days after falling 262 feet down Tegelberg Mountain in Bavaria, Germany, on Aug. 15.

A friend of the gymnast told Czech media that Stichova “was trying to take a selfie when she fell. The person, who wanted to remain anonymous, said Stichova was close to the edge of the mountain when her foot appeared to slip while setting up for a photo in front of the castle.

"We will never find out whether she slipped or whether a piece of the rock edge broke off," the friend said, per the Daily Mail.

Stichova was reportedly with her boyfriend, David, and two friends ______ the time of the incident. Police said it was a challenging climb to reach the gymnast after her fall. Although Stichova was alive when first responders arrived, she was suffering from severe injuries.

The Daily Mail reports Stichova's family took her off life support due to irreversible brain damage ______ Aug. 21. She died ________ 5:30 a.m. that day.

"With deep:sorrow, we announce that our wonderful friend, gymnast, rêpresentative, and coach, Natalie Stichova, has left us forever due to a tragic accident," Stichova's club, Sokol Pribram Sports Gymnastics, said in an official statement, per the Daily Mail, "We are extending our heartfelt condolences to her family and close friends, sending them strength and support.”

Adapted from: <https://www.foxnews.com/sports/czech-star-gymnast-dies-after-falling-over-200-feet-from-mountain-while-attempling-take-selfte-report>.

Which word ending in_ing, extracted from the text, is used as an adjective?

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3758411 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Marinha
Orgão: Col. Naval
Provas:

Read Text III to answer questions 28 to 31.

TEXT III

Czech star gymnast dies after falling over 200 feet from mountain while attempting to take selfie

By Scott Thompson - Fox News Updated August 26, 2024

The Daily Mail reports that 23-year-old Natalie Stichova was declared dead six days after falling 262 feet down Tegelberg Mountain in Bavaria, Germany, on Aug. 15.

A friend of the gymnast told Czech media that Stichova “was trying to take a selfie when she fell. The person, who wanted to remain anonymous, said Stichova was close to the edge of the mountain when her foot appeared to slip while setting up for a photo in front of the castle.

"We will never find out whether she slipped or whether a piece of the rock edge broke off," the friend said, per the Daily Mail.

Stichova was reportedly with her boyfriend, David, and two friends ______ the time of the incident. Police said it was a challenging climb to reach the gymnast after her fall. Although Stichova was alive when first responders arrived, she was suffering from severe injuries.

The Daily Mail reports Stichova's family took her off life support due to irreversible brain damage ______ Aug. 21. She died ________ 5:30 a.m. that day.

"With deep:sorrow, we announce that our wonderful friend, gymnast, rêpresentative, and coach, Natalie Stichova, has left us forever due to a tragic accident," Stichova's club, Sokol Pribram Sports Gymnastics, said in an official statement, per the Daily Mail, "We are extending our heartfelt condolences to her family and close friends, sending them strength and support.”

Adapted from: <https://www.foxnews.com/sports/czech-star-gymnast-dies-after-falling-over-200-feet-from-mountain-while-attempling-take-selfte-report>.

Complete the three gaps in the 4th and 5th paragraphs with the missing prepositions. Then, mark the correct option, respectively.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3758410 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Marinha
Orgão: Col. Naval
Provas:

Read Text III to answer questions 28 to 31.

TEXT III

Czech star gymnast dies after falling over 200 feet from mountain while attempting to take selfie

By Scott Thompson - Fox News Updated August 26, 2024

The Daily Mail reports that 23-year-old Natalie Stichova was declared dead six days after falling 262 feet down Tegelberg Mountain in Bavaria, Germany, on Aug. 15.

A friend of the gymnast told Czech media that Stichova “was trying to take a selfie when she fell. The person, who wanted to remain anonymous, said Stichova was close to the edge of the mountain when her foot appeared to slip while setting up for a photo in front of the castle.

"We will never find out whether she slipped or whether a piece of the rock edge broke off," the friend said, per the Daily Mail.

Stichova was reportedly with her boyfriend, David, and two friends ______ the time of the incident. Police said it was a challenging climb to reach the gymnast after her fall. Although Stichova was alive when first responders arrived, she was suffering from severe injuries.

The Daily Mail reports Stichova's family took her off life support due to irreversible brain damage ______ Aug. 21. She died ________ 5:30 a.m. that day.

"With deep:sorrow, we announce that our wonderful friend, gymnast, rêpresentative, and coach, Natalie Stichova, has left us forever due to a tragic accident," Stichova's club, Sokol Pribram Sports Gymnastics, said in an official statement, per the Daily Mail, "We are extending our heartfelt condolences to her family and close friends, sending them strength and support.”

Adapted from: <https://www.foxnews.com/sports/czech-star-gymnast-dies-after-falling-over-200-feet-from-mountain-while-attempling-take-selfte-report>.

Mark the option in which the statement, in parenthesis, correctly explains the verb tense(s) used in the corresponding extracts from the text.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3758409 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Marinha
Orgão: Col. Naval
Provas:

Read Text II to answer questions 23 to 27.

TEXT II

France to trial ban on mobile phones at school for children under 15

Kim Willsher - Paris Tue 27 Aug 2024

France is to trial a ban on mobile phones at school for pupils who are younger than 15, seeking to give children a “digital pause” that, if judged successful, could be rolled out nationwide from January.

Just under 200 secondary schools will take place in the experiment that will require youngsters to hand over phones on arrival at reception. It takes the prohibition on the devices further than a 2018 law that banned pupils at primary and secondary schools from using their phones on the premises but allowed them to keep possession of them.

Announcing the trial on Tuesday, the acting education minister, Nicole Belloubet, said the aim was to give youngsters a “digital pause”. If the trial proves successful, the ban would be introduced in all schools from January, Belloubet said.

A commission set up by the president, Emmanuel Macron, expressed concern that the overexposure of children to screens was having a detrimental effect on their health and development.

A 140-page report published in March concluded there was “a very clear consensus on the direct and indirect negative effects of digital devices on sleep, on being sedentary - a lack of physical activity and the risk of being overweight and even obese - as well as on sight”. It said the “hyper” use of phones and other digital technology was not only bad for children but also for “society and civilisation”.

The report recommended children's use of mobile phones be controlled in stages: no mobile phones before the age of at least 11, mobiles without internet access between 11 and 13, phones with internet but no access to social media before 15.

It also suggested children under three years old should not be exposed at all to digital devices, which it said were “not necessary for the healthy development of the child”.

“We must put the digital tool in its place. Up to at least six years old a child has no need for a digital device to develop,” Servane Mouton, a neurologist and neurophysiologist who was on the commission, said. “We have to teach parents once again how to play with their children.”

Banning phones in schools has long been debated across Europe. In countries where bans exist this is most often confined to their use and do not require children to hand them over.

In Germany there are no formal restrictions but most schools have prohibited the use of mobile phones and digital devices in classrooms except for education purposes. A quasi ban has been in place in Dutch secondary school classrooms since the beginning of this year, but as a recommendation and not a legal obligation. From this school year the directive will also apply to primary schools.

Italy was early to phone bans, introducing one in 2007, easing it in 2017 and reimposing it in 2022. It applies to all age groups.

In February this year, the British government issued guidance for schools “on prohibiting the use of mobile phones throughout the school day” but said it was for individual head teachers and leaders to decide on phone use policy.

Portugal is experimenting with a compromise by introducing a number of phone-free days at schools each month, while in Spain schools in some autonomous regions have imposed a ban but there is no nationwide prohibition.

Adapted from: <https://wvww.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/aug/27/france-to-trial-ban-on-mobile-phones-at-school-for-children-under-15>

The main purpose of the experiment in France is to:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3758408 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Marinha
Orgão: Col. Naval
Provas:

Read Text II to answer questions 23 to 27.

TEXT II

France to trial ban on mobile phones at school for children under 15

Kim Willsher - Paris Tue 27 Aug 2024

France is to trial a ban on mobile phones at school for pupils who are younger than 15, seeking to give children a “digital pause” that, if judged successful, could be rolled out nationwide from January.

Just under 200 secondary schools will take place in the experiment that will require youngsters to hand over phones on arrival at reception. It takes the prohibition on the devices further than a 2018 law that banned pupils at primary and secondary schools from using their phones on the premises but allowed them to keep possession of them.

Announcing the trial on Tuesday, the acting education minister, Nicole Belloubet, said the aim was to give youngsters a “digital pause”. If the trial proves successful, the ban would be introduced in all schools from January, Belloubet said.

A commission set up by the president, Emmanuel Macron, expressed concern that the overexposure of children to screens was having a detrimental effect on their health and development.

A 140-page report published in March concluded there was “a very clear consensus on the direct and indirect negative effects of digital devices on sleep, on being sedentary - a lack of physical activity and the risk of being overweight and even obese - as well as on sight”. It said the “hyper” use of phones and other digital technology was not only bad for children but also for “society and civilisation”.

The report recommended children's use of mobile phones be controlled in stages: no mobile phones before the age of at least 11, mobiles without internet access between 11 and 13, phones with internet but no access to social media before 15.

It also suggested children under three years old should not be exposed at all to digital devices, which it said were “not necessary for the healthy development of the child”.

“We must put the digital tool in its place. Up to at least six years old a child has no need for a digital device to develop,” Servane Mouton, a neurologist and neurophysiologist who was on the commission, said. “We have to teach parents once again how to play with their children.”

Banning phones in schools has long been debated across Europe. In countries where bans exist this is most often confined to their use and do not require children to hand them over.

In Germany there are no formal restrictions but most schools have prohibited the use of mobile phones and digital devices in classrooms except for education purposes. A quasi ban has been in place in Dutch secondary school classrooms since the beginning of this year, but as a recommendation and not a legal obligation. From this school year the directive will also apply to primary schools.

Italy was early to phone bans, introducing one in 2007, easing it in 2017 and reimposing it in 2022. It applies to all age groups.

In February this year, the British government issued guidance for schools “on prohibiting the use of mobile phones throughout the school day” but said it was for individual head teachers and leaders to decide on phone use policy.

Portugal is experimenting with a compromise by introducing a number of phone-free days at schools each month, while in Spain schools in some autonomous regions have imposed a ban but there is no nationwide prohibition.

Adapted from: <https://wvww.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/aug/27/france-to-trial-ban-on-mobile-phones-at-school-for-children-under-15>

According to the text:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3758407 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Marinha
Orgão: Col. Naval
Provas:

Read Text II to answer questions 23 to 27.

TEXT II

France to trial ban on mobile phones at school for children under 15

Kim Willsher - Paris Tue 27 Aug 2024

France is to trial a ban on mobile phones at school for pupils who are younger than 15, seeking to give children a “digital pause” that, if judged successful, could be rolled out nationwide from January.

Just under 200 secondary schools will take place in the experiment that will require youngsters to hand over phones on arrival at reception. It takes the prohibition on the devices further than a 2018 law that banned pupils at primary and secondary schools from using their phones on the premises but allowed them to keep possession of them.

Announcing the trial on Tuesday, the acting education minister, Nicole Belloubet, said the aim was to give youngsters a “digital pause”. If the trial proves successful, the ban would be introduced in all schools from January, Belloubet said.

A commission set up by the president, Emmanuel Macron, expressed concern that the overexposure of children to screens was having a detrimental effect on their health and development.

A 140-page report published in March concluded there was “a very clear consensus on the direct and indirect negative effects of digital devices on sleep, on being sedentary - a lack of physical activity and the risk of being overweight and even obese - as well as on sight”. It said the “hyper” use of phones and other digital technology was not only bad for children but also for “society and civilisation”.

The report recommended children's use of mobile phones be controlled in stages: no mobile phones before the age of at least 11, mobiles without internet access between 11 and 13, phones with internet but no access to social media before 15.

It also suggested children under three years old should not be exposed at all to digital devices, which it said were “not necessary for the healthy development of the child”.

“We must put the digital tool in its place. Up to at least six years old a child has no need for a digital device to develop,” Servane Mouton, a neurologist and neurophysiologist who was on the commission, said. “We have to teach parents once again how to play with their children.”

Banning phones in schools has long been debated across Europe. In countries where bans exist this is most often confined to their use and do not require children to hand them over.

In Germany there are no formal restrictions but most schools have prohibited the use of mobile phones and digital devices in classrooms except for education purposes. A quasi ban has been in place in Dutch secondary school classrooms since the beginning of this year, but as a recommendation and not a legal obligation. From this school year the directive will also apply to primary schools.

Italy was early to phone bans, introducing one in 2007, easing it in 2017 and reimposing it in 2022. It applies to all age groups.

In February this year, the British government issued guidance for schools “on prohibiting the use of mobile phones throughout the school day” but said it was for individual head teachers and leaders to decide on phone use policy.

Portugal is experimenting with a compromise by introducing a number of phone-free days at schools each month, while in Spain schools in some autonomous regions have imposed a ban but there is no nationwide prohibition.

Adapted from: <https://wvww.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/aug/27/france-to-trial-ban-on-mobile-phones-at-school-for-children-under-15>

lt is correct to infer that in France:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3758406 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Marinha
Orgão: Col. Naval
Provas:

Read Text II to answer questions 23 to 27.

TEXT II

France to trial ban on mobile phones at school for children under 15

Kim Willsher - Paris Tue 27 Aug 2024

France is to trial a ban on mobile phones at school for pupils who are younger than 15, seeking to give children a “digital pause” that, if judged successful, could be rolled out nationwide from January.

Just under 200 secondary schools will take place in the experiment that will require youngsters to hand over phones on arrival at reception. It takes the prohibition on the devices further than a 2018 law that banned pupils at primary and secondary schools from using their phones on the premises but allowed them to keep possession of them.

Announcing the trial on Tuesday, the acting education minister, Nicole Belloubet, said the aim was to give youngsters a “digital pause”. If the trial proves successful, the ban would be introduced in all schools from January, Belloubet said.

A commission set up by the president, Emmanuel Macron, expressed concern that the overexposure of children to screens was having a detrimental effect on their health and development.

A 140-page report published in March concluded there was “a very clear consensus on the direct and indirect negative effects of digital devices on sleep, on being sedentary - a lack of physical activity and the risk of being overweight and even obese - as well as on sight”. It said the “hyper” use of phones and other digital technology was not only bad for children but also for “society and civilisation”.

The report recommended children's use of mobile phones be controlled in stages: no mobile phones before the age of at least 11, mobiles without internet access between 11 and 13, phones with internet but no access to social media before 15.

It also suggested children under three years old should not be exposed at all to digital devices, which it said were “not necessary for the healthy development of the child”.

“We must put the digital tool in its place. Up to at least six years old a child has no need for a digital device to develop,” Servane Mouton, a neurologist and neurophysiologist who was on the commission, said. “We have to teach parents once again how to play with their children.”

Banning phones in schools has long been debated across Europe. In countries where bans exist this is most often confined to their use and do not require children to hand them over.

In Germany there are no formal restrictions but most schools have prohibited the use of mobile phones and digital devices in classrooms except for education purposes. A quasi ban has been in place in Dutch secondary school classrooms since the beginning of this year, but as a recommendation and not a legal obligation. From this school year the directive will also apply to primary schools.

Italy was early to phone bans, introducing one in 2007, easing it in 2017 and reimposing it in 2022. It applies to all age groups.

In February this year, the British government issued guidance for schools “on prohibiting the use of mobile phones throughout the school day” but said it was for individual head teachers and leaders to decide on phone use policy.

Portugal is experimenting with a compromise by introducing a number of phone-free days at schools each month, while in Spain schools in some autonomous regions have imposed a ban but there is no nationwide prohibition.

Adapted from: <https://wvww.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/aug/27/france-to-trial-ban-on-mobile-phones-at-school-for-children-under-15>

The pronouns in the sentence “(...) but allowed them to keep possession of them” 2nd paragraph) refer to, respectively:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3758405 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Marinha
Orgão: Col. Naval
Provas:

Read Text II to answer questions 23 to 27.

TEXT II

France to trial ban on mobile phones at school for children under 15

Kim Willsher - Paris Tue 27 Aug 2024

France is to trial a ban on mobile phones at school for pupils who are younger than 15, seeking to give children a “digital pause” that, if judged successful, could be rolled out nationwide from January.

Just under 200 secondary schools will take place in the experiment that will require youngsters to hand over phones on arrival at reception. It takes the prohibition on the devices further than a 2018 law that banned pupils at primary and secondary schools from using their phones on the premises but allowed them to keep possession of them.

Announcing the trial on Tuesday, the acting education minister, Nicole Belloubet, said the aim was to give youngsters a “digital pause”. If the trial proves successful, the ban would be introduced in all schools from January, Belloubet said.

A commission set up by the president, Emmanuel Macron, expressed concern that the overexposure of children to screens was having a detrimental effect on their health and development.

A 140-page report published in March concluded there was “a very clear consensus on the direct and indirect negative effects of digital devices on sleep, on being sedentary - a lack of physical activity and the risk of being overweight and even obese - as well as on sight”. It said the “hyper” use of phones and other digital technology was not only bad for children but also for “society and civilisation”.

The report recommended children's use of mobile phones be controlled in stages: no mobile phones before the age of at least 11, mobiles without internet access between 11 and 13, phones with internet but no access to social media before 15.

It also suggested children under three years old should not be exposed at all to digital devices, which it said were “not necessary for the healthy development of the child”.

“We must put the digital tool in its place. Up to at least six years old a child has no need for a digital device to develop,” Servane Mouton, a neurologist and neurophysiologist who was on the commission, said. “We have to teach parents once again how to play with their children.”

Banning phones in schools has long been debated across Europe. In countries where bans exist this is most often confined to their use and do not require children to hand them over.

In Germany there are no formal restrictions but most schools have prohibited the use of mobile phones and digital devices in classrooms except for education purposes. A quasi ban has been in place in Dutch secondary school classrooms since the beginning of this year, but as a recommendation and not a legal obligation. From this school year the directive will also apply to primary schools.

Italy was early to phone bans, introducing one in 2007, easing it in 2017 and reimposing it in 2022. It applies to all age groups.

In February this year, the British government issued guidance for schools “on prohibiting the use of mobile phones throughout the school day” but said it was for individual head teachers and leaders to decide on phone use policy.

Portugal is experimenting with a compromise by introducing a number of phone-free days at schools each month, while in Spain schools in some autonomous regions have imposed a ban but there is no nationwide prohibition.

Adapted from: <https://wvww.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/aug/27/france-to-trial-ban-on-mobile-phones-at-school-for-children-under-15>

Mark the option in which the extract from the text contains an adverb in the comparative degree.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3758404 Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Marinha
Orgão: Col. Naval
Provas:

Read Text I to answer questions 21 and 22.

TEXT I

Enunciado 4544781-1

https://comicskingdom.com/pajama-diaries/2016-05-26

Mark the grammatically correct question for this sentence extracted from the cartoon: “it takes her 40 minutes to walk five blocks to school.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas