Foram encontradas 50 questões.
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Legalle
Orgão: Pref. Caxias do Sul-RS
it's Going Away”: A Small Movie Theater Struggles to Survive
On a rainy day last week, 72 moviegoers visited the Park Plaza Cinema in Hilton Head Island, S.C., to see Liam Neeson in “Honest Thief.” It was the largest single-day attendance the independently owned fivescreen theater had seen since reopening in August after a five-month shutdown. The feeling of celebration was short-lived. The next day, only 22 people showed.
Park Plaza, like movie theaters big and small around the country, has been decimated by the pandemic. After its long closure, it has established social-distancing protocols and installed new air filtration systems. It has tried initiatives like curbside popcorn sales. But the efforts have not been enough to offset the larger trends upending moviegoing, namely that many people still don't seem inclined to return to theaters in large numbers and that Hollywood, with no audience to speak of, has pushed off most major releases until next year.
“We are an industry that is part of the fabric of America, and it's going away," said Lucie Mann, who owns and runs the theater with her husband, Larry. "If we don't get aid soon, it's going to change forever.”
The pandemic has brought national theater chains like AMC to the brink of bankruptey. It has been just as unsparing with establishments like the Manns, one of 602 independent owners in the United States with just one or two locations. Although accounting for only 12 percent of the total theaters in the country, these independent operations are often in smaller communities, providing movies to communities sometimes ignored by the major chains. After shutting its doors in March, Park Plaza received a Paycheck Protection Program loan in April for $47,000 to cover labor and overhead costs. That, plus a slew of private events, sustained the Manns through the summer. [...].
Source: https://www.nytimes.com
Why was "in" used in the second sentence of the first paragraph instead of "on" or "at'?
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Legalle
Orgão: Pref. Caxias do Sul-RS
it's Going Away”: A Small Movie Theater Struggles to Survive
On a rainy day last week, 72 moviegoers visited the Park Plaza Cinema in Hilton Head Island, S.C., to see Liam Neeson in “Honest Thief.” It was the largest single-day attendance the independently owned fivescreen theater had seen since reopening in August after a five-month shutdown. The feeling of celebration was short-lived. The next day, only 22 people showed.
Park Plaza, like movie theaters big and small around the country, has been decimated by the pandemic. After its long closure, it has established social-distancing protocols and installed new air filtration systems. It has tried initiatives like curbside popcorn sales. But the efforts have not been enough to offset the larger trends upending moviegoing, namely that many people still don't seem inclined to return to theaters in large numbers and that Hollywood, with no audience to speak of, has pushed off most major releases until next year.
“We are an industry that is part of the fabric of America, and it's going away," said Lucie Mann, who owns and runs the theater with her husband, Larry. "If we don't get aid soon, it's going to change forever.”
The pandemic has brought national theater chains like AMC to the brink of bankruptey. It has been just as unsparing with establishments like the Manns, one of 602 independent owners in the United States with just one or two locations. Although accounting for only 12 percent of the total theaters in the country, these independent operations are often in smaller communities, providing movies to communities sometimes ignored by the major chains. After shutting its doors in March, Park Plaza received a Paycheck Protection Program loan in April for $47,000 to cover labor and overhead costs. That, plus a slew of private events, sustained the Manns through the summer. [...].
Source: https://www.nytimes.com
It is possible to state that the word "That" in the last sentence of the fourth paragraph refers to:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Legalle
Orgão: Pref. Caxias do Sul-RS
it's Going Away”: A Small Movie Theater Struggles to Survive
On a rainy day last week, 72 moviegoers visited the Park Plaza Cinema in Hilton Head Island, S.C., to see Liam Neeson in “Honest Thief.” It was the largest single-day attendance the independently owned fivescreen theater had seen since reopening in August after a five-month shutdown. The feeling of celebration was short-lived. The next day, only 22 people showed.
Park Plaza, like movie theaters big and small around the country, has been decimated by the pandemic. After its long closure, it has established social-distancing protocols and installed new air filtration systems. It has tried initiatives like curbside popcorn sales. But the efforts have not been enough to offset the larger trends upending moviegoing, namely that many people still don't seem inclined to return to theaters in large numbers and that Hollywood, with no audience to speak of, has pushed off most major releases until next year.
“We are an industry that is part of the fabric of America, and it's going away," said Lucie Mann, who owns and runs the theater with her husband, Larry. "If we don't get aid soon, it's going to change forever.”
The pandemic has brought national theater chains like AMC to the brink of bankruptey. It has been just as unsparing with establishments like the Manns, one of 602 independent owners in the United States with just one or two locations. Although accounting for only 12 percent of the total theaters in the country, these independent operations are often in smaller communities, providing movies to communities sometimes ignored by the major chains. After shutting its doors in March, Park Plaza received a Paycheck Protection Program loan in April for $47,000 to cover labor and overhead costs. That, plus a slew of private events, sustained the Manns through the summer. [...].
Source: https://www.nytimes.com
Itis possible to state that the word "who" in the third paragraph refers to:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Legalle
Orgão: Pref. Caxias do Sul-RS
it's Going Away”: A Small Movie Theater Struggles to Survive
On a rainy day last week, 72 moviegoers visited the Park Plaza Cinema in Hilton Head Island, S.C., to see Liam Neeson in “Honest Thief.” It was the largest single-day attendance the independently owned fivescreen theater had seen since reopening in August after a five-month shutdown. The feeling of celebration was short-lived. The next day, only 22 people showed.
Park Plaza, like movie theaters big and small around the country, has been decimated by the pandemic. After its long closure, it has established social-distancing protocols and installed new air filtration systems. It has tried initiatives like curbside popcorn sales. But the efforts have not been enough to offset the larger trends upending moviegoing, namely that many people still don't seem inclined to return to theaters in large numbers and that Hollywood, with no audience to speak of, has pushed off most major releases until next year.
“We are an industry that is part of the fabric of America, and it's going away," said Lucie Mann, who owns and runs the theater with her husband, Larry. "If we don't get aid soon, it's going to change forever.”
The pandemic has brought national theater chains like AMC to the brink of bankruptey. It has been just as unsparing with establishments like the Manns, one of 602 independent owners in the United States with just one or two locations. Although accounting for only 12 percent of the total theaters in the country, these independent operations are often in smaller communities, providing movies to communities sometimes ignored by the major chains. After shutting its doors in March, Park Plaza received a Paycheck Protection Program loan in April for $47,000 to cover labor and overhead costs. That, plus a slew of private events, sustained the Manns through the summer. [...].
Source: https://www.nytimes.com
How many indefinite articles can be found in the first sentence of the second paragraph of the excerpt?
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Legalle
Orgão: Pref. Caxias do Sul-RS
it's Going Away”: A Small Movie Theater Struggles to Survive
On a rainy day last week, 72 moviegoers visited the Park Plaza Cinema in Hilton Head Island, S.C., to see Liam Neeson in “Honest Thief.” It was the largest single-day attendance the independently owned fivescreen theater had seen since reopening in August after a five-month shutdown. The feeling of celebration was short-lived. The next day, only 22 people showed.
Park Plaza, like movie theaters big and small around the country, has been decimated by the pandemic. After its long closure, it has established social-distancing protocols and installed new air filtration systems. It has tried initiatives like curbside popcorn sales. But the efforts have not been enough to offset the larger trends upending moviegoing, namely that many people still don't seem inclined to return to theaters in large numbers and that Hollywood, with no audience to speak of, has pushed off most major releases until next year.
“We are an industry that is part of the fabric of America, and it's going away," said Lucie Mann, who owns and runs the theater with her husband, Larry. "If we don't get aid soon, it's going to change forever.”
The pandemic has brought national theater chains like AMC to the brink of bankruptey. It has been just as unsparing with establishments like the Manns, one of 602 independent owners in the United States with just one or two locations. Although accounting for only 12 percent of the total theaters in the country, these independent operations are often in smaller communities, providing movies to communities sometimes ignored by the major chains. After shutting its doors in March, Park Plaza received a Paycheck Protection Program loan in April for $47,000 to cover labor and overhead costs. That, plus a slew of private events, sustained the Manns through the summer. [...].
Source: https://www.nytimes.com
In which tense "to brought" is inflected at the beginning of the fourth paragraph of the excerpt?
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Legalle
Orgão: Pref. Caxias do Sul-RS
it's Going Away”: A Small Movie Theater Struggles to Survive
On a rainy day last week, 72 moviegoers visited the Park Plaza Cinema in Hilton Head Island, S.C., to see Liam Neeson in “Honest Thief.” It was the largest single-day attendance the independently owned fivescreen theater had seen since reopening in August after a five-month shutdown. The feeling of celebration was short-lived. The next day, only 22 people showed.
Park Plaza, like movie theaters big and small around the country, has been decimated by the pandemic. After its long closure, it has established social-distancing protocols and installed new air filtration systems. It has tried initiatives like curbside popcorn sales. But the efforts have not been enough to offset the larger trends upending moviegoing, namely that many people still don't seem inclined to return to theaters in large numbers and that Hollywood, with no audience to speak of, has pushed off most major releases until next year.
“We are an industry that is part of the fabric of America, and it's going away," said Lucie Mann, who owns and runs the theater with her husband, Larry. "If we don't get aid soon, it's going to change forever.”
The pandemic has brought national theater chains like AMC to the brink of bankruptey. It has been just as unsparing with establishments like the Manns, one of 602 independent owners in the United States with just one or two locations. Although accounting for only 12 percent of the total theaters in the country, these independent operations are often in smaller communities, providing movies to communities sometimes ignored by the major chains. After shutting its doors in March, Park Plaza received a Paycheck Protection Program loan in April for $47,000 to cover labor and overhead costs. That, plus a slew of private events, sustained the Manns through the summer. [...].
Source: https://www.nytimes.com
When did Holywood postpone most of its major releases, considering that the story was published on October 29, 20207
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Legalle
Orgão: Pref. Caxias do Sul-RS
it's Going Away”: A Small Movie Theater Struggles to Survive
On a rainy day last week, 72 moviegoers visited the Park Plaza Cinema in Hilton Head Island, S.C., to see Liam Neeson in “Honest Thief.” It was the largest single-day attendance the independently owned fivescreen theater had seen since reopening in August after a five-month shutdown. The feeling of celebration was short-lived. The next day, only 22 people showed.
Park Plaza, like movie theaters big and small around the country, has been decimated by the pandemic. After its long closure, it has established social-distancing protocols and installed new air filtration systems. It has tried initiatives like curbside popcorn sales. But the efforts have not been enough to offset the larger trends upending moviegoing, namely that many people still don't seem inclined to return to theaters in large numbers and that Hollywood, with no audience to speak of, has pushed off most major releases until next year.
“We are an industry that is part of the fabric of America, and it's going away," said Lucie Mann, who owns and runs the theater with her husband, Larry. "If we don't get aid soon, it's going to change forever.”
The pandemic has brought national theater chains like AMC to the brink of bankruptey. It has been just as unsparing with establishments like the Manns, one of 602 independent owners in the United States with just one or two locations. Although accounting for only 12 percent of the total theaters in the country, these independent operations are often in smaller communities, providing movies to communities sometimes ignored by the major chains. After shutting its doors in March, Park Plaza received a Paycheck Protection Program loan in April for $47,000 to cover labor and overhead costs. That, plus a slew of private events, sustained the Manns through the summer. [...].
Source: https://www.nytimes.com
A few months are mentioned throughout the excerpt. What happened in April?
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Legalle
Orgão: Pref. Caxias do Sul-RS
it's Going Away”: A Small Movie Theater Struggles to Survive
On a rainy day last week, 72 moviegoers visited the Park Plaza Cinema in Hilton Head Island, S.C., to see Liam Neeson in “Honest Thief.” It was the largest single-day attendance the independently owned fivescreen theater had seen since reopening in August after a five-month shutdown. The feeling of celebration was short-lived. The next day, only 22 people showed.
Park Plaza, like movie theaters big and small around the country, has been decimated by the pandemic. After its long closure, it has established social-distancing protocols and installed new air filtration systems. It has tried initiatives like curbside popcorn sales. But the efforts have not been enough to offset the larger trends upending moviegoing, namely that many people still don't seem inclined to return to theaters in large numbers and that Hollywood, with no audience to speak of, has pushed off most major releases until next year.
“We are an industry that is part of the fabric of America, and it's going away," said Lucie Mann, who owns and runs the theater with her husband, Larry. "If we don't get aid soon, it's going to change forever.”
The pandemic has brought national theater chains like AMC to the brink of bankruptey. It has been just as unsparing with establishments like the Manns, one of 602 independent owners in the United States with just one or two locations. Although accounting for only 12 percent of the total theaters in the country, these independent operations are often in smaller communities, providing movies to communities sometimes ignored by the major chains. After shutting its doors in March, Park Plaza received a Paycheck Protection Program loan in April for $47,000 to cover labor and overhead costs. That, plus a slew of private events, sustained the Manns through the summer. [...].
Source: https://www.nytimes.com
According to the information contained in the excerpt, analyze the statemenits.
I. Allthe independent movie theaters in the United States are settled in small cities.
II. Only 23 percent of the independent movie theaters in the United States are broken because of the pandemic.
III. Park Plaza Cinema had to close temporarily in March 2020.
It is possible to affirm that is (are) correct:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Legalle
Orgão: Pref. Caxias do Sul-RS
it's Going Away”: A Small Movie Theater Struggles to Survive
On a rainy day last week, 72 moviegoers visited the Park Plaza Cinema in Hilton Head Island, S.C., to see Liam Neeson in “Honest Thief.” It was the largest single-day attendance the independently owned fivescreen theater had seen since reopening in August after a five-month shutdown. The feeling of celebration was short-lived. The next day, only 22 people showed.
Park Plaza, like movie theaters big and small around the country, has been decimated by the pandemic. After its long closure, it has established social-distancing protocols and installed new air filtration systems. It has tried initiatives like curbside popcorn sales. But the efforts have not been enough to offset the larger trends upending moviegoing, namely that many people still don't seem inclined to return to theaters in large numbers and that Hollywood, with no audience to speak of, has pushed off most major releases until next year.
“We are an industry that is part of the fabric of America, and it's going away," said Lucie Mann, who owns and runs the theater with her husband, Larry. "If we don't get aid soon, it's going to change forever.”
The pandemic has brought national theater chains like AMC to the brink of bankruptey. It has been just as unsparing with establishments like the Manns, one of 602 independent owners in the United States with just one or two locations. Although accounting for only 12 percent of the total theaters in the country, these independent operations are often in smaller communities, providing movies to communities sometimes ignored by the major chains. After shutting its doors in March, Park Plaza received a Paycheck Protection Program loan in April for $47,000 to cover labor and overhead costs. That, plus a slew of private events, sustained the Manns through the summer. [...].
Source: https://www.nytimes.com
By reading the first paragraph of the excerpt, it follows that Liam Nesson is probably:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Legalle
Orgão: Pref. Caxias do Sul-RS
it's Going Away”: A Small Movie Theater Struggles to Survive
On a rainy day last week, 72 moviegoers visited the Park Plaza Cinema in Hilton Head Island, S.C., to see Liam Neeson in “Honest Thief.” It was the largest single-day attendance the independently owned fivescreen theater had seen since reopening in August after a five-month shutdown. The feeling of celebration was short-lived. The next day, only 22 people showed.
Park Plaza, like movie theaters big and small around the country, has been decimated by the pandemic. After its long closure, it has established social-distancing protocols and installed new air filtration systems. It has tried initiatives like curbside popcorn sales. But the efforts have not been enough to offset the larger trends upending moviegoing, namely that many people still don't seem inclined to return to theaters in large numbers and that Hollywood, with no audience to speak of, has pushed off most major releases until next year.
“We are an industry that is part of the fabric of America, and it's going away," said Lucie Mann, who owns and runs the theater with her husband, Larry. "If we don't get aid soon, it's going to change forever.”
The pandemic has brought national theater chains like AMC to the brink of bankruptey. It has been just as unsparing with establishments like the Manns, one of 602 independent owners in the United 27 States with just one or two locations. Although accounting for only 12 percent of the total theaters in the country, these independent operations are often in smaller communities, providing movies to communities sometimes ignored by the major chains. After shutting its doors in March, Park Plaza received a Paycheck Protection Program loan in April for $47,000 to cover labor and overhead costs. That, plus a slew of private events, sustained the Manns through the summer. [...].
Source: https://www.nytimes.com
It is possible to say that, according to the excerpt, what sustained the Manns through the summer was:
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