Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 50 questões.

1953567 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: AOCP
Orgão: Pref. Betim-MG
Provas:
TEXT V
I happily advertise the fact I breastfed – it’s high time that brands embraced it too
by Nell Frizzell
New ads by Aldi, Adidas and Sainsbury’s all feature breastfeeding mothers. Hopefully this will normalize the process to help new parents feed with ease
It may be some time yet until we see a mother in an advert precariously balancing her child/bag/shopping/pets before pushing a nipple into the mouth of a howling, jam-smeared toddler. But when they do, oh boy, are my days as a model really going to get going.
In recent weeks, a series of adverts have appeared from Tu at Sainsbury’s, Adidas and Aldi, all featuring breastfeeding mothers. Some are wearing flowery blouses and have tattoos, others are holding a naked baby between the zips of a sports top. Of course the women are good-looking, of course they are slim, of course we cannot actually see anything as erotically charged or as morally unsettling as an areola – this is still advertising, after all. But it is, surely, a start.
As someone who breastfed her son for 21 shirtlifting, bra-soaking, carefree months, I am of course pleased to see breastfeeding being held up as something both everyday and aspirational. It is as prosaic as a trip to the supermarket yet as physically impressive as professional sport. It belongs on billboards and screens as much as beds and sofas.
here is no such thing as “normal” when it comes to babies or bodies. But to normalize something that, in the words of UNICEF, has a profoundly positive impact on child health, is of course to be celebrated. You might find yourself whipping out a boob on a train full of football fans; you might squirt milk across somebody else’s coat on the bus; you might find yourself answering the door with your full breast outside your clothes without noticing. And if the presence of big brands behind your bra straps encourage you to keep feeding, then all power to your elbow. It is a shame that this hasn’t happened sooner, but it’s better late than never – and there’s no use crying over spilled (breast) milk.
(Source:
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/shortcuts/2019/oct/02/adve rts-breastfeeding-mothers-aldi-adidas-sainsburys.Access: 08/01/2020)
What is the main subject in TEXT V?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1953566 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: AOCP
Orgão: Pref. Betim-MG
Provas:
TEXT V
I happily advertise the fact I breastfed – it’s high time that brands embraced it too
by Nell Frizzell
New ads by Aldi, Adidas and Sainsbury’s all feature breastfeeding mothers. Hopefully this will normalize the process to help new parents feed with ease
It may be some time yet until we see a mother in an advert precariously balancing her child/bag/shopping/pets before pushing a nipple into the mouth of a howling, jam-smeared toddler. But when they do, oh boy, are my days as a model really going to get going.
In recent weeks, a series of adverts have appeared from Tu at Sainsbury’s, Adidas and Aldi, all featuring breastfeeding mothers. Some are wearing flowery blouses and have tattoos, others are holding a naked baby between the zips of a sports top. Of course the women are good-looking, of course they are slim, of course we cannot actually see anything as erotically charged or as morally unsettling as an areola – this is still advertising, after all. But it is, surely, a start.
As someone who breastfed her son for 21 shirtlifting, bra-soaking, carefree months, I am of course pleased to see breastfeeding being held up as something both everyday and aspirational. It is as prosaic as a trip to the supermarket yet as physically impressive as professional sport. It belongs on billboards and screens as much as beds and sofas.
here is no such thing as “normal” when it comes to babies or bodies. But to normalize something that, in the words of UNICEF, has a profoundly positive impact on child health, is of course to be celebrated. You might find yourself whipping out a boob on a train full of football fans; you might squirt milk across somebody else’s coat on the bus; you might find yourself answering the door with your full breast outside your clothes without noticing. And if the presence of big brands behind your bra straps encourage you to keep feeding, then all power to your elbow. It is a shame that this hasn’t happened sooner, but it’s better late than never – and there’s no use crying over spilled (breast) milk.
(Source:
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/shortcuts/2019/oct/02/adve rts-breastfeeding-mothers-aldi-adidas-sainsburys.Access: 08/01/2020)
Analyze the following extracts taken from the text and mark the option which grammatically expresses the highest degree of probability:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1953565 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: AOCP
Orgão: Pref. Betim-MG
Provas:
TEXT V
I happily advertise the fact I breastfed – it’s high time that brands embraced it too
by Nell Frizzell
New ads by Aldi, Adidas and Sainsbury’s all feature breastfeeding mothers. Hopefully this will normalize the process to help new parents feed with ease
It may be some time yet until we see a mother in an advert precariously balancing her child/bag/shopping/pets before pushing a nipple into the mouth of a howling, jam-smeared toddler. But when they do, oh boy, are my days as a model really going to get going.
In recent weeks, a series of adverts have appeared from Tu at Sainsbury’s, Adidas and Aldi, all featuring breastfeeding mothers. Some are wearing flowery blouses and have tattoos, others are holding a naked baby between the zips of a sports top. Of course the women are good-looking, of course they are slim, of course we cannot actually see anything as erotically charged or as morally unsettling as an areola – this is still advertising, after all. But it is, surely, a start.
As someone who breastfed her son for 21 shirtlifting, bra-soaking, carefree months, I am of course pleased to see breastfeeding being held up as something both everyday and aspirational. It is as prosaic as a trip to the supermarket yet as physically impressive as professional sport. It belongs on billboards and screens as much as beds and sofas.
here is no such thing as “normal” when it comes to babies or bodies. But to normalize something that, in the words of UNICEF, has a profoundly positive impact on child health, is of course to be celebrated. You might find yourself whipping out a boob on a train full of football fans; you might squirt milk across somebody else’s coat on the bus; you might find yourself answering the door with your full breast outside your clothes without noticing. And if the presence of big brands behind your bra straps encourage you to keep feeding, then all power to your elbow. It is a shame that this hasn’t happened sooner, but it’s better late than never – and there’s no use crying over spilled (breast) milk.
(Source:
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/shortcuts/2019/oct/02/adve rts-breastfeeding-mothers-aldi-adidas-sainsburys.Access: 08/01/2020)
In the excerpt “But to normalize something that, in the words of UNICEF, has a profoundly positive impact on child health, is of course to be celebrated”, the words “but”, “profoundly”, “positive”, “health” and “celebrated” are respectively used as:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1953564 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: AOCP
Orgão: Pref. Betim-MG
Provas:
TEXT V
I happily advertise the fact I breastfed – it’s high time that brands embraced it too
by Nell Frizzell
New ads by Aldi, Adidas and Sainsbury’s all feature breastfeeding mothers. Hopefully this will normalize the process to help new parents feed with ease
It may be some time yet until we see a mother in an advert precariously balancing her child/bag/shopping/pets before pushing a nipple into the mouth of a howling, jam-smeared toddler. But when they do, oh boy, are my days as a model really going to get going.
In recent weeks, a series of adverts have appeared from Tu at Sainsbury’s, Adidas and Aldi, all featuring breastfeeding mothers. Some are wearing flowery blouses and have tattoos, others are holding a naked baby between the zips of a sports top. Of course the women are good-looking, of course they are slim, of course we cannot actually see anything as erotically charged or as morally unsettling as an areola – this is still advertising, after all. But it is, surely, a start.
As someone who breastfed her son for 21 shirtlifting, bra-soaking, carefree months, I am of course pleased to see breastfeeding being held up as something both everyday and aspirational. It is as prosaic as a trip to the supermarket yet as physically impressive as professional sport. It belongs on billboards and screens as much as beds and sofas.
here is no such thing as “normal” when it comes to babies or bodies. But to normalize something that, in the words of UNICEF, has a profoundly positive impact on child health, is of course to be celebrated. You might find yourself whipping out a boob on a train full of football fans; you might squirt milk across somebody else’s coat on the bus; you might find yourself answering the door with your full breast outside your clothes without noticing. And if the presence of big brands behind your bra straps encourage you to keep feeding, then all power to your elbow. It is a shame that this hasn’t happened sooner, but it’s better late than never – and there’s no use crying over spilled (breast) milk.
(Source:
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/shortcuts/2019/oct/02/adve rts-breastfeeding-mothers-aldi-adidas-sainsburys.Access: 08/01/2020)
Read the following options which present words taken from the text and mark the only CORRECT one concerning word formation processes.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1953563 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: AOCP
Orgão: Pref. Betim-MG
Provas:
TEXT IV
Sleep (slēp):
A natural state of rest, occurring at regular intervals, in which the eyes usually close, the muscles relax, and
responsiveness to external events decreases. Growth and repair of the tissues of the body are thought to occur duringsleep, and energy is conserved and stored. In humans and some other animals, scientists have identified one phase of sleep (called REM sleep) as the phase in which dreams occur.
Did You Know? Shakespeare had it right. He said that sleep was the "balm of hurt minds" and that sleep "knits up the ravel'd sleeve of care." In other words, sleep helps overcome the stress of everyday life. So the third of your life you spend asleep is not a waste of time. All warm-blooded animals have the need to sleep. Studies have shown that animals that are not allowed to sleep for a long enough time can actually die. Babies, human and animal, sleep even more than adults do. Researchers think that babies may sleep so much because it helps the young body continue to develop quickly. Not only are babies' bodies growing, but their brains are, too – and sleep is very important for the brain. During sleep, the brain sorts through experiences and stores important new information for later use. This processing of experiences, in fact, is thought to be a major source of dreams.
(Source: The American Heritage® Student Science Dictionary, Second Edition. Copyright © 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.)
Observe the following excerpt taken form the text: “(…) scientists have identified one phase of sleep (called REM sleep) as the phase in which dreams occur”. Mark the CORRECT option concerning the verb tense usage in the sentence.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1953562 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: AOCP
Orgão: Pref. Betim-MG
Provas:
TEXT IV
Sleep (slēp):
A natural state of rest, occurring at regular intervals, in which the eyes usually close, the muscles relax, and
responsiveness to external events decreases. Growth and repair of the tissues of the body are thought to occur duringsleep, and energy is conserved and stored. In humans and some other animals, scientists have identified one phase of sleep (called REM sleep) as the phase in which dreams occur.
Did You Know? Shakespeare had it right. He said that sleep was the "balm of hurt minds" and that sleep "knits up the ravel'd sleeve of care." In other words, sleep helps overcome the stress of everyday life. So the third of your life you spend asleep is not a waste of time. All warm-blooded animals have the need to sleep. Studies have shown that animals that are not allowed to sleep for a long enough time can actually die. Babies, human and animal, sleep even more than adults do. Researchers think that babies may sleep so much because it helps the young body continue to develop quickly. Not only are babies' bodies growing, but their brains are, too – and sleep is very important for the brain. During sleep, the brain sorts through experiences and stores important new information for later use. This processing of experiences, in fact, is thought to be a major source of dreams.
(Source: The American Heritage® Student Science Dictionary, Second Edition. Copyright © 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.)
Mark what is CORRECT to say about dreams:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1953561 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: AOCP
Orgão: Pref. Betim-MG
Provas:
TEXT V
I happily advertise the fact I breastfed – it’s high time that brands embraced it too
by Nell Frizzell
New ads by Aldi, Adidas and Sainsbury’s all feature breastfeeding mothers. Hopefully this will normalize the process to help new parents feed with ease
It may be some time yet until we see a mother in an advert precariously balancing her child/bag/shopping/pets before pushing a nipple into the mouth of a howling, jam-smeared toddler. But when they do, oh boy, are my days as a model really going to get going.
In recent weeks, a series of adverts have appeared from Tu at Sainsbury’s, Adidas and Aldi, all featuring breastfeeding mothers. Some are wearing flowery blouses and have tattoos, others are holding a naked baby between the zips of a sports top. Of course the women are good-looking, of course they are slim, of course we cannot actually see anything as erotically charged or as morally unsettling as an areola – this is still advertising, after all. But it is, surely, a start.
As someone who breastfed her son for 21 shirtlifting, bra-soaking, carefree months, I am of course pleased to see breastfeeding being held up as something both everyday and aspirational. It is as prosaic as a trip to the supermarket yet as physically impressive as professional sport. It belongs on billboards and screens as much as beds and sofas.
here is no such thing as “normal” when it comes to babies or bodies. But to normalize something that, in the words of UNICEF, has a profoundly positive impact on child health, is of course to be celebrated. You might find yourself whipping out a boob on a train full of football fans; you might squirt milk across somebody else’s coat on the bus; you might find yourself answering the door with your full breast outside your clothes without noticing. And if the presence of big brands behind your bra straps encourage you to keep feeding, then all power to your elbow. It is a shame that this hasn’t happened sooner, but it’s better late than never – and there’s no use crying over spilled (breast) milk.
(Source:
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/shortcuts/2019/oct/02/adve rts-breastfeeding-mothers-aldi-adidas-sainsburys.Access: 08/01/2020)
Who is probably the speaker in TEXT V?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1953560 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: AOCP
Orgão: Pref. Betim-MG
Provas:
TEXT IV
Sleep (slēp):
A natural state of rest, occurring at regular intervals, in which the eyes usually close, the muscles relax, and
responsiveness to external events decreases. Growth and repair of the tissues of the body are thought to occur duringsleep, and energy is conserved and stored. In humans and some other animals, scientists have identified one phase of sleep (called REM sleep) as the phase in which dreams occur.
Did You Know? Shakespeare had it right. He said that sleep was the "balm of hurt minds" and that sleep "knits up the ravel'd sleeve of care." In other words, sleep helps overcome the stress of everyday life. So the third of your life you spend asleep is not a waste of time. All warm-blooded animals have the need to sleep. Studies have shown that animals that are not allowed to sleep for a long enough time can actually die. Babies, human and animal, sleep even more than adults do. Researchers think that babies may sleep so much because it helps the young body continue to develop quickly. Not only are babies' bodies growing, but their brains are, too – and sleep is very important for the brain. During sleep, the brain sorts through experiences and stores important new information for later use. This processing of experiences, in fact, is thought to be a major source of dreams.
(Source: The American Heritage® Student Science Dictionary, Second Edition. Copyright © 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.)
Concerning the dictionary definition for the word “sleep”, it is INCORRECT to say that:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1953559 Ano: 2020
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: AOCP
Orgão: Pref. Betim-MG
Provas:
TEXT V
I happily advertise the fact I breastfed – it’s high time that brands embraced it too
by Nell Frizzell
New ads by Aldi, Adidas and Sainsbury’s all feature breastfeeding mothers. Hopefully this will normalize the process to help new parents feed with ease
It may be some time yet until we see a mother in an advert precariously balancing her child/bag/shopping/pets before pushing a nipple into the mouth of a howling, jam-smeared toddler. But when they do, oh boy, are my days as a model really going to get going.
In recent weeks, a series of adverts have appeared from Tu at Sainsbury’s, Adidas and Aldi, all featuring breastfeeding mothers. Some are wearing flowery blouses and have tattoos, others are holding a naked baby between the zips of a sports top. Of course the women are good-looking, of course they are slim, of course we cannot actually see anything as erotically charged or as morally unsettling as an areola – this is still advertising, after all. But it is, surely, a start.
As someone who breastfed her son for 21 shirtlifting, bra-soaking, carefree months, I am of course pleased to see breastfeeding being held up as something both everyday and aspirational. It is as prosaic as a trip to the supermarket yet as physically impressive as professional sport. It belongs on billboards and screens as much as beds and sofas.
here is no such thing as “normal” when it comes to babies or bodies. But to normalize something that, in the words of UNICEF, has a profoundly positive impact on child health, is of course to be celebrated. You might find yourself whipping out a boob on a train full of football fans; you might squirt milk across somebody else’s coat on the bus; you might find yourself answering the door with your full breast outside your clothes without noticing. And if the presence of big brands behind your bra straps encourage you to keep feeding, then all power to your elbow. It is a shame that this hasn’t happened sooner, but it’s better late than never – and there’s no use crying over spilled (breast) milk.
(Source:
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/shortcuts/2019/oct/02/adve rts-breastfeeding-mothers-aldi-adidas-sainsburys.Access: 08/01/2020)
Considering the excerpt: “As someone who breastfed her son for 21 shirt-lifting, bra-soaking, carefree months, I am of course pleased (…)”, mark the option which is CORRECT about the usage of pronouns in the sentence.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

TEXTO 1

Brasil é um dos maiores consumidores de plástico,

mas só recicla 2% do total


Entre os entraves para melhorar o índice estão a falta de incentivos e de infraestrutura, além da baixa qualidade dos produtos reciclados

Na última semana, um brasileiro comum possivelmente gerou 1 kg de lixo plástico. Um italiano gera a mesma quantia em cinco dias e alguém que mora na Indonésia, em dez. No Brasil, menos de 2% desse plástico será reciclado.

Os dados fazem parte de um estudo da WWF lançado na noite desta segunda (4). A organização fez um levantamento de pesquisas relacionadas ao plástico e elaborou um relatório que aponta o crescimento desse tipo de resíduo e sugere possíveis caminhos para solucionar a questão.

Os números do plástico são enormes. Nos oceanos há perto de 300 milhões de toneladas (o que equivale a cerca de 11 trilhões de garrafas plásticas de 500 ml). E essa estimativa não leva em conta o lixo terrestre. Daqui a 11 anos, em 2030, o total de lixo plástico poderá ter dobrado.

Em 2016, 396 milhões de toneladas de plástico virgem foram produzidos —cerca de 53 kg por pessoa. Parte desses produtos se tornou lixo, especialmente nos quatro países maiores poluentes: Estados Unidos, China, Índia e Brasil.

Somente uma pequena parcela desse lixo é devidamente manejado e reciclado. Por aqui, a reciclagem é inferior a 2%, o menor valor entre os líderes em produção de detritos. Nos EUA o valor chega a 35%; na China, 22%; na Índia, 6%.

Considerando o mundo inteiro, cerca de 20% do plástico é coletado para reciclagem, mas isso não significa que ele realmente o terá esse destino honroso. Segundo o estudo da WWF, na Europa, por exemplo, menos da metade do material é reaproveitado.

A baixa qualidade de produtos feitos com o material reciclado, seu baixo valor de mercado e a possível presença de contaminação atrapalham a expansão da atividade.

Um tratado internacional pode ser o início da solução, segundo Anna Carolina Lobo, coordenadora da WWF-Brasil. A organização defende um caminho semelhante ao protocolo de Montreal. Nele, os países se comprometeram, em 1987, à proteção da camada de ozônio a partir da interrupção no uso de substâncias que a destroem (a deterioração da camada aumenta o índice de radiação e, consequentemente, as chances de câncer de pele, além de agredir florestas e prejudicar a atividade agropecuária).

Adaptado de:<https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/ambiente/2019/03/brasil-e-um-dos-maiores-consumidores-de-plastico-mas-so-recicla-2-do-total.shtml> . Acesso em: 19 jan. 2020.


Enunciado 1953537-1

Disponível em:<https://assets.almanaquesos.com/wpcontent/uploads/2018/06/sos-menos_plastico.jpg.>. Acesso em: 19 jan. 2020.

Assinale a alternativa que apresenta a correta interpretação dos textos 1 e 2.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas