Foram encontradas 325 questões.
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. André Rocha-RS
- Gramática - Língua InglesaAdjetivos | Adjectives
- Gramática - Língua InglesaVerbos | Verbs
- Gramática - Língua InglesaPronomes | Pronouns
- Gramática - Língua InglesaAdvérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions
- Gramática - Língua InglesaSubstantivos e compostos | Nouns and compounds
Instructions: Answer questions 36 to 40 based on the following text.
‘Alien’ minerals never found on Earth identified in meteorite
- While generations of camel herders of El Ali town in Somalia had known about the
- meteorite, which is the ninth largest ever found, it wasn’t scientifically documented until a few
- years ago. The oddly smooth rock caught the eye of prospectors, and when they hit it with a
- hammer, a metallic tone resounded. They suspected it was an iron meteorite — an object from
- space largely made of iron and nickel, many of which are believed to have come from the cores
- of smashed asteroids or planetesimals, similar to our own planet's metallic center.
- The prospectors sent small samples of ___ meteorite to scientists for confirmation and
- further analysis, and ___ piece fell into ___ hands of Chris Herd, curator of the meteorite
- collection at the University of Alberta. While studying the slice of rock, he noticed several crystals
- with unusual compositions. Later analysis, including a comparison to synthetically created
- minerals, confirmed his hunch: the composition and structure of the minerals had never been
- seen before in nature.
- Herd named one mineral elaliite, after the meteorite itself, and the second elkinstantonite,
- after Lindy Elkins-Tanton, a planetary scientist at Arizona State University. Chi Ma, a meteorite
- mineralogist at the California Institute of Technology who has previously discovered dozens of
- new minerals, identified the third mineral, calling it Olsenite to honor the late Edward Olsen, a
- former curator at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.
- Our planet has roughly 5,800 minerals, while only about 480 have been found in
- meteorites. Many of those meteoritic minerals are truly alien — some 30 percent don't form
- naturally on Earth. Studying the mineralogy of meteorites is "armchair solar system exploration,
- in a lot of ways", Herd says. "We're trying to constrain the variety of conditions that have existed
- within different planetary bodies".
Adapted from: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/article/alien-minerals-never-found-on-earth-identified-in-meteorite
The bold word “synthetically” (l. 10), in the context presented in the text, is classified as a/an:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. André Rocha-RS
Instructions: Answer questions 36 to 40 based on the following text.
‘Alien’ minerals never found on Earth identified in meteorite
- While generations of camel herders of El Ali town in Somalia had known about the
- meteorite, which is the ninth largest ever found, it wasn’t scientifically documented until a few
- years ago. The oddly smooth rock caught the eye of prospectors, and when they hit it with a
- hammer, a metallic tone resounded. They suspected it was an iron meteorite — an object from
- space largely made of iron and nickel, many of which are believed to have come from the cores
- of smashed asteroids or planetesimals, similar to our own planet's metallic center.
- The prospectors sent small samples of ___ meteorite to scientists for confirmation and
- further analysis, and ___ piece fell into ___ hands of Chris Herd, curator of the meteorite
- collection at the University of Alberta. While studying the slice of rock, he noticed several crystals
- with unusual compositions. Later analysis, including a comparison to synthetically created
- minerals, confirmed his hunch: the composition and structure of the minerals had never been
- seen before in nature.
- Herd named one mineral elaliite, after the meteorite itself, and the second elkinstantonite,
- after Lindy Elkins-Tanton, a planetary scientist at Arizona State University. Chi Ma, a meteorite
- mineralogist at the California Institute of Technology who has previously discovered dozens of
- new minerals, identified the third mineral, calling it Olsenite to honor the late Edward Olsen, a
- former curator at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.
- Our planet has roughly 5,800 minerals, while only about 480 have been found in
- meteorites. Many of those meteoritic minerals are truly alien — some 30 percent don't form
- naturally on Earth. Studying the mineralogy of meteorites is "armchair solar system exploration,
- in a lot of ways", Herd says. "We're trying to constrain the variety of conditions that have existed
- within different planetary bodies".
Adapted from: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/article/alien-minerals-never-found-on-earth-identified-in-meteorite
In lines 01 and 02 we find the following excerpt:
“While generations of camel herders of El Ali town in Somalia had known (1) about the meteorite, which is the ninth largest ever found, it wasn’t scientifically documented (2) until a few years ago.”
Consider the statements below about the highlighted structures and mark T, if true, of F, if false.
( ) 1 is a past perfect structure.
( ) The action expressed by 1 happened after the action expressed by 2.
( ) 2 is a simple past, negative passive voice structure.
( ) 2 is a completed action.
The correct order of filling the parentheses, from top to botton, is:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. André Rocha-RS
Instructions: Answer questions 36 to 40 based on the following text.
‘Alien’ minerals never found on Earth identified in meteorite
- While generations of camel herders of El Ali town in Somalia had known about the
- meteorite, which is the ninth largest ever found, it wasn’t scientifically documented until a few
- years ago. The oddly smooth rock caught the eye of prospectors, and when they hit it with a
- hammer, a metallic tone resounded. They suspected it was an iron meteorite — an object from
- space largely made of iron and nickel, many of which are believed to have come from the cores
- of smashed asteroids or planetesimals, similar to our own planet's metallic center.
- The prospectors sent small samples of ___ meteorite to scientists for confirmation and
- further analysis, and ___ piece fell into ___ hands of Chris Herd, curator of the meteorite
- collection at the University of Alberta. While studying the slice of rock, he noticed several crystals
- with unusual compositions. Later analysis, including a comparison to synthetically created
- minerals, confirmed his hunch: the composition and structure of the minerals had never been
- seen before in nature.
- Herd named one mineral elaliite, after the meteorite itself, and the second elkinstantonite,
- after Lindy Elkins-Tanton, a planetary scientist at Arizona State University. Chi Ma, a meteorite
- mineralogist at the California Institute of Technology who has previously discovered dozens of
- new minerals, identified the third mineral, calling it Olsenite to honor the late Edward Olsen, a
- former curator at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.
- Our planet has roughly 5,800 minerals, while only about 480 have been found in
- meteorites. Many of those meteoritic minerals are truly alien — some 30 percent don't form
- naturally on Earth. Studying the mineralogy of meteorites is "armchair solar system exploration,
- in a lot of ways", Herd says. "We're trying to constrain the variety of conditions that have existed
- within different planetary bodies".
Adapted from: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/article/alien-minerals-never-found-on-earth-identified-in-meteorite
According to the author, which of the following statements about the minerals found in meteorites is INCORRECT?
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. André Rocha-RS
Instructions: Answer questions 36 to 40 based on the following text.
‘Alien’ minerals never found on Earth identified in meteorite
- While generations of camel herders of El Ali town in Somalia had known about the
- meteorite, which is the ninth largest ever found, it wasn’t scientifically documented until a few
- years ago. The oddly smooth rock caught the eye of prospectors, and when they hit it with a
- hammer, a metallic tone resounded. They suspected it was an iron meteorite — an object from
- space largely made of iron and nickel, many of which are believed to have come from the cores
- of smashed asteroids or planetesimals, similar to our own planet's metallic center.
- The prospectors sent small samples of ___ meteorite to scientists for confirmation and
- further analysis, and ___ piece fell into ___ hands of Chris Herd, curator of the meteorite
- collection at the University of Alberta. While studying the slice of rock, he noticed several crystals
- with unusual compositions. Later analysis, including a comparison to synthetically created
- minerals, confirmed his hunch: the composition and structure of the minerals had never been
- seen before in nature.
- Herd named one mineral elaliite, after the meteorite itself, and the second elkinstantonite,
- after Lindy Elkins-Tanton, a planetary scientist at Arizona State University. Chi Ma, a meteorite
- mineralogist at the California Institute of Technology who has previously discovered dozens of
- new minerals, identified the third mineral, calling it Olsenite to honor the late Edward Olsen, a
- former curator at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.
- Our planet has roughly 5,800 minerals, while only about 480 have been found in
- meteorites. Many of those meteoritic minerals are truly alien — some 30 percent don't form
- naturally on Earth. Studying the mineralogy of meteorites is "armchair solar system exploration,
- in a lot of ways", Herd says. "We're trying to constrain the variety of conditions that have existed
- within different planetary bodies".
Adapted from: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/article/alien-minerals-never-found-on-earth-identified-in-meteorite
Consider the following statements about the El Ali meteorite:
I. The meteorite was found a few years ago.
II. Scientist started studying the meteorite a few years ago.
III. Chris Heard has named all new minerals found in the meteorite.
According to the article, which statements are correct?
Provas
Em relação às Competências Gerais da Educação Básica, analise as afirmações abaixo:
1. Valorizar e utilizar os conhecimentos historicamente construídos sobre o mundo físico, social, cultural e digital para entender e explicar a realidade.
2. Exercitar a curiosidade intelectual e recorrer à abordagem própria das ciências, incluindo a investigação, a reflexão, a análise crítica, a imaginação e a criatividade.
3. Valorizar e fruir as diversas manifestações artísticas e culturais, das locais às mundiais, e também participar de práticas diversificadas da produção artístico-cultural.
4. Utilizar diferentes linguagens – verbal (oral ou visual-motora, como Libras, e escrita), corporal, visual, sonora e digital.
5. Compreender, utilizar e criar tecnologias digitais de informação e comunicação de forma crítica, significativa, reflexiva e ética nas diversas práticas sociais.
O resultado da somatória dos números correspondentes às afirmações corretas é:
Provas
Em relação à proposta pedagógica realizada com o coletivo da escola, analise as assertivas abaixo:
I. Articula, no interior da escola, a densa vivência da descentralização e, através disso, permite o diálogo consistente e fecundo com a comunidade e com os órgãos dirigentes.
II. A importância de a escola construir este documento é reconhecida pela legislação. Assim, o Projeto Político-Pedagógico, em âmbito federal, é citado pela Lei de Diretrizes e Bases.
III. É preciso pensar o projeto pedagógico como um direito e um dever da escola e como um dos desafios para o avanço na organização do trabalho pedagógico.
IV. Consiste em uma prática educativa, contribuindo para as manifestações do caráter formativo do ambiente de trabalho, ou seja, a organização escolar, o sistema de gestão e de tomada de decisões.
Quais estão corretas?
Provas
Sobre um(a) determinado(a) autor(a), analise as características abaixo:
\( \bullet \) Zona de desenvolvimento real.
\( \bullet \) Zona de desenvolvimento potencial.
\( \bullet \) Zona de desenvolvimento próxima.
As características acima definem a teoria dos estudos do(a) autor(a):
Provas
Conforme Libâneo (1992), analise a sentença abaixo:
O planejamento tem um grande valor por abordar o processo de racionalização, organização e coordenação da ação docente, articulando a atividade escolar e a problemática do contexto social (1ª PARTE). A ação de planejar se reduz ao simples preenchimento de formulários para controle administrativo, é a atividade consciente de previsão das ações docentes, fundamentadas em opções empíricas (2ª PARTE). Ao planejar, o educador busca a integração de todas as áreas de informação para, por meio delas, alcançar as necessidades do público e promover seu crescimento e conhecimento (3ª PARTE).
Quais partes estão corretas?
Provas
Em relação à alfabetização e letramento, analise as assertivas abaixo e assinale V, se verdadeiras, ou F, se falsas.
( ) Uma pessoa alfabetizada conhece o código alfabético.
( ) O letramento é entendido como produto da participação em práticas sociais que usam a escrita como sistema simbólico e tecnologia.
( ) Para alfabetizar letrando, deve haver um trabalho intencional de sensibilização por meio de atividades específicas de comunicação.
( ) Alfabetizar restringe-se a codificar e decodificar o código alfabético.
A ordem correta de preenchimento dos parênteses, de cima para baixo, é:
Provas
Quantos números primos existem entre os números 0 e 10?
Provas
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