Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 55 questões.

225843 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: TI - Sistemas Operacionais
Banca: QUADRIX
Orgão: DATAPREV
Com relação aos sistemas operacionais Windows 7 BR Ultimate (em sua instalação padrão) e Linux, são feitas as seguintes afirmações:

I. Enquanto o Windows possui uma única interface gráfica, o Linux possui várias, entre elas podemos citar o KDE, Gnome e WindowMaker, entre outras.

II.Todos os programas que rodam no Windows possuem versão no Linux e vice-versa. O LibreOffice é um exemplo típico.

III.No ambiente Windows, as unidades de disco são identificadas por letras seguidas de dois pontos, enquanto que no Linux são identificados por arquivos referentes aos dispositivos, gravados no diretório /dev.

IV. Os comandos copy do Windows e cp do Linux podem ser considerados equivalentes, pois servem para copiar arquivos.

Está correto o que se afirma em:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
225759 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: História
Banca: QUADRIX
Orgão: DATAPREV
A Comissão da Verdade iniciou seus trabalhos em maio deste ano. Formada por sete membros, uma de suas principais atribuições será examinar e esclarecer violações de direitos humanos ocorridas durante o período de ditadura militar no Brasil (1964-1985). Considerando seu conhecimento histórico, assinale a alternativa na qual não consta o nome de um presidente do Brasil durante a ditadura militar.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Etimologia pode ser compreendida como o estudo da composição dos vocábulos e das regras de sua evolução histórica. Tomando-se, por base, o estudo da etimologia, podemos concluir acerca do conceito de Ética que:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
A respeito do estudo de MORAL e ÉTICA, assinale a alternativa correta
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
225699 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: Direito Administrativo
Banca: QUADRIX
Orgão: DATAPREV
Apenas no ano de 2011, o Ministério Público Federal na Paraíba ajuizou 97 ações de improbidade administrativa contra agentes públicos do Estado. As ações são referentes a supostas irregularidades ocorridas em 60 cidades da Paraíba, entre os anos de 1998 e 2010.

(Fonte: Gl. Data: 18/01/2012)

É possível afirmar, conforme a notícia apresentada e seus conhecimentos atualizados sobre a aplicação prática da Lei n°8.429/92, que:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Analise a imagem abaixo sobre Democracia e, de acordo com seus conhecimentos sobre a Lei de Improbidade Administrativa, assinale a alternativa falsa.

enunciado 225698-1
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Observando-se o disposto na Lei n° 8.429/92 e as teorias a respeito de Direito e Moral conhecidas atualmente, assinale a alternativa falsa.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
225531 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: QUADRIX
Orgão: DATAPREV
Snacking at the Colosseum? Prepare to Pay a Fine

Dapper as always in their bleached white shirts and matching caps, members of Rome's municipal police force were out on the Spanish Steps one warm autumn day, trolling for offenders.

"Stefano, look! There's another eater," one officer said to another before sauntering over to a baffled couple who had begun munching on an inoffensive-looking meai while sitting on the steps. The culprits, a couple of foreign tourists, had settled down on the landmark, one of Rome's most famous. In their hands were the offending items: sandwiches.

The officers pounced, and after much waving of hands, the couple wrapped up the sandwiches and slouched away, looking sheepish.

They were in violation unwittingly, in ali probability - of a municipal ordinance that went into force this month. The measure outlaws eating and drinking in areas of "particular historie, artistic, architectonic and cultural value" in Rome's center, to better protect the city's monuments, which include landmarks like the Colosseum, the Pantheon and the Spanish Steps. Fines range ali the way up to $650 for culinary recidivists.

Italian cities, Rome included, have long enacted ordinances and regulations to protect monuments from ill- mannered tourists (and residents). But after a recent stroll through the city center, where he saw several people making themselves at home, literally, Rome's mayor, Gianni Alemanno, decided the rules needed toughening.

"There were people camped out, and we weren't able to move them," said Antonio Gazzellone, the municipal council member responsible for tourism, noting that alcohol may have been involved. The new ordinance, which also outlaws camping or "setting up makeshift beds," will "give monuments back their proper decorum," he said. "Rome needs to be protected, its beauty respected."

(http://www.nytimes.com)
Colosseum, Pantheon and the Spanish Steps are examples of:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
225530 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: QUADRIX
Orgão: DATAPREV
Snacking at the Colosseum? Prepare to Pay a Fine

Dapper as always in their bleached white shirts and matching caps, members of Rome's municipal police force were out on the Spanish Steps one warm autumn day, trolling for offenders.

"Stefano, look! There's another eater," one officer said to another before sauntering over to a baffled couple who had begun munching on an inoffensive-looking meai while sitting on the steps. The culprits, a couple of foreign tourists, had settled down on the landmark, one of Rome's most famous. In their hands were the offending items: sandwiches.

The officers pounced, and after much waving of hands, the couple wrapped up the sandwiches and slouched away, looking sheepish.

They were in violation unwittingly, in ali probability - of a municipal ordinance that went into force this month. The measure outlaws eating and drinking in areas of "particular historie, artistic, architectonic and cultural value" in Rome's center, to better protect the city's monuments, which include landmarks like the Colosseum, the Pantheon and the Spanish Steps. Fines range ali the way up to $650 for culinary recidivists.

Italian cities, Rome included, have long enacted ordinances and regulations to protect monuments from ill- mannered tourists (and residents). But after a recent stroll through the city center, where he saw several people making themselves at home, literally, Rome's mayor, Gianni Alemanno, decided the rules needed toughening.

"There were people camped out, and we weren't able to move them," said Antonio Gazzellone, the municipal council member responsible for tourism, noting that alcohol may have been involved. The new ordinance, which also outlaws camping or "setting up makeshift beds," will "give monuments back their proper decorum," he said. "Rome needs to be protected, its beauty respected."

(http://www.nytimes.com)
"Unwittingly", in the text, means that:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
225526 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: QUADRIX
Orgão: DATAPREV
Snacking at the Colosseum? Prepare to Pay a Fine

Dapper as always in their bleached white shirts and matching caps, members of Rome's municipal police force were out on the Spanish Steps one warm autumn day, trolling for offenders.

"Stefano, look! There's another eater," one officer said to another before sauntering over to a baffled couple who had begun munching on an inoffensive-looking meai while sitting on the steps. The culprits, a couple of foreign tourists, had settled down on the landmark, one of Rome's most famous. In their hands were the offending items: sandwiches.

The officers pounced, and after much waving of hands, the couple wrapped up the sandwiches and slouched away, looking sheepish.

They were in violation unwittingly, in ali probability - of a municipal ordinance that went into force this month. The measure outlaws eating and drinking in areas of "particular historie, artistic, architectonic and cultural value" in Rome's center, to better protect the city's monuments, which include landmarks like the Colosseum, the Pantheon and the Spanish Steps. Fines range ali the way up to $650 for culinary recidivists.

Italian cities, Rome included, have long enacted ordinances and regulations to protect monuments from ill- mannered tourists (and residents). But after a recent stroll through the city center, where he saw several people making themselves at home, literally, Rome's mayor, Gianni Alemanno, decided the rules needed toughening.

"There were people camped out, and we weren't able to move them," said Antonio Gazzellone, the municipal council member responsible for tourism, noting that alcohol may have been involved. The new ordinance, which also outlaws camping or "setting up makeshift beds," will "give monuments back their proper decorum," he said. "Rome needs to be protected, its beauty respected."

(http://www.nytimes.com)
The word "residents":

I.Refers to people who are living in Rome.
II. Is a verb. ,
III.Is plural.

Is (are) correct:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas