Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 50 questões.

3090872 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNCERN
Orgão: Pref. Guamaré-RN
It can be stated that the order of the adjectives in the noun group “rowdy audience members” found in paragraph 3 of text 1 is determined:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3090871 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNCERN
Orgão: Pref. Guamaré-RN
Text 1
From Shakespeare to Harry Styles: Have audiences always been rowdy?
By Clare Thorp12th July 2023
From Pink being given a giant wheel of Brie to Harry Syles getting pelled in the face by a mystery object, disruptive music and theatre shows seems to be on the rise. But is it anything new, asks Clare Thorp.
When Harry Styles was pelted with chicken nuggets while on stage at New York's Madison Square Gardens last summer, he took it in his stride. "Interesting approach," smiled Styles, who has also weathered kiwi fruits, Skittles and bunches of flowers while performing. But when a mystery object hit him in the eye at a concert in Vienna last weekend, he wasn't laughing but, rather, wincing in pain.
It was the latest in a string of incidents where audience members have hurled potentially dangerous objects at performers. Earlier this month Drake was hit on the arm by a flying phone. That came days after country singer Kelsea Ballerini was struck in the face with a bracelet. In May, Bebe Rexha was taken to hospital and needed multiple stitches after a phone hit her in the eye. A man, since charged with assault, told police he thought it "would be funny" to try and hit the singer.
It's not just live music seeing disruptive behaviour. In April, police were called to a performance of The Bodyguard musical in Manchester when rowdy audience members reacted with "unprecedented levels of violence" to staff. At other venues there has been everything from "heated arguments" to full-on brawls. And in the US, one fan's disruption of a Broadway play in December 2022 followed several other incidents of audience outbursts.
Across the cultural sphere, it feels like audiences are misbehaving. At a recent Las Vegas show, Adele weighed in, saying: "Have you noticed how people are like, forgetting … show etiquette at the moment? People just throwing shit on stage" – before warning fans not to try it with her.
Billie Eilish meanwhile, says this kind of thing, while "infuriating", is nothing new. "I've been getting hit on stage with things for like, literally, six years," she told the Hollywood Reporter. Dr Kirsty Sedgman, a senior lecturer in theatre at the University of Bristol who specialises in audience research, also cautions against calling it a new trend. "People have always thrown things on stage," says Sedgman, whose latest book, On Being Unreasonable, explores widening divisions in society over how we use public space. "Whether that's fruit as a way to signify displeasure, or softer items like underwear and flowers as a signal of adoration." Back In 1775, a performer in Sheridan's The Rivals stopped the show when he was pelted with an apple.
Adapted from: https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20230712
The objective of question 3 is to explore the following aspect of the passive voice theory:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3090870 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNCERN
Orgão: Pref. Guamaré-RN
Text 1
From Shakespeare to Harry Styles: Have audiences always been rowdy?
By Clare Thorp12th July 2023
From Pink being given a giant wheel of Brie to Harry Syles getting pelled in the face by a mystery object, disruptive music and theatre shows seems to be on the rise. But is it anything new, asks Clare Thorp.
When Harry Styles was pelted with chicken nuggets while on stage at New York's Madison Square Gardens last summer, he took it in his stride. "Interesting approach," smiled Styles, who has also weathered kiwi fruits, Skittles and bunches of flowers while performing. But when a mystery object hit him in the eye at a concert in Vienna last weekend, he wasn't laughing but, rather, wincing in pain.
It was the latest in a string of incidents where audience members have hurled potentially dangerous objects at performers. Earlier this month Drake was hit on the arm by a flying phone. That came days after country singer Kelsea Ballerini was struck in the face with a bracelet. In May, Bebe Rexha was taken to hospital and needed multiple stitches after a phone hit her in the eye. A man, since charged with assault, told police he thought it "would be funny" to try and hit the singer.
It's not just live music seeing disruptive behaviour. In April, police were called to a performance of The Bodyguard musical in Manchester when rowdy audience members reacted with "unprecedented levels of violence" to staff. At other venues there has been everything from "heated arguments" to full-on brawls. And in the US, one fan's disruption of a Broadway play in December 2022 followed several other incidents of audience outbursts.
Across the cultural sphere, it feels like audiences are misbehaving. At a recent Las Vegas show, Adele weighed in, saying: "Have you noticed how people are like, forgetting … show etiquette at the moment? People just throwing shit on stage" – before warning fans not to try it with her.
Billie Eilish meanwhile, says this kind of thing, while "infuriating", is nothing new. "I've been getting hit on stage with things for like, literally, six years," she told the Hollywood Reporter. Dr Kirsty Sedgman, a senior lecturer in theatre at the University of Bristol who specialises in audience research, also cautions against calling it a new trend. "People have always thrown things on stage," says Sedgman, whose latest book, On Being Unreasonable, explores widening divisions in society over how we use public space. "Whether that's fruit as a way to signify displeasure, or softer items like underwear and flowers as a signal of adoration." Back In 1775, a performer in Sheridan's The Rivals stopped the show when he was pelted with an apple.
Adapted from: https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20230712
Passive voice is commonly used in journalistic texts. The extract below was retrieved from text 1. It justifies the use of passive voice because:

From Pink being given a giant wheel of Brie to Harry Syles getting pelled in the face by a mystery object, disruptive music and theatre shows seems to be on the rise.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3090869 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNCERN
Orgão: Pref. Guamaré-RN
Text 1
From Shakespeare to Harry Styles: Have audiences always been rowdy?
By Clare Thorp12th July 2023
From Pink being given a giant wheel of Brie to Harry Syles getting pelled in the face by a mystery object, disruptive music and theatre shows seems to be on the rise. But is it anything new, asks Clare Thorp.
When Harry Styles was pelted with chicken nuggets while on stage at New York's Madison Square Gardens last summer, he took it in his stride. "Interesting approach," smiled Styles, who has also weathered kiwi fruits, Skittles and bunches of flowers while performing. But when a mystery object hit him in the eye at a concert in Vienna last weekend, he wasn't laughing but, rather, wincing in pain.
It was the latest in a string of incidents where audience members have hurled potentially dangerous objects at performers. Earlier this month Drake was hit on the arm by a flying phone. That came days after country singer Kelsea Ballerini was struck in the face with a bracelet. In May, Bebe Rexha was taken to hospital and needed multiple stitches after a phone hit her in the eye. A man, since charged with assault, told police he thought it "would be funny" to try and hit the singer.
It's not just live music seeing disruptive behaviour. In April, police were called to a performance of The Bodyguard musical in Manchester when rowdy audience members reacted with "unprecedented levels of violence" to staff. At other venues there has been everything from "heated arguments" to full-on brawls. And in the US, one fan's disruption of a Broadway play in December 2022 followed several other incidents of audience outbursts.
Across the cultural sphere, it feels like audiences are misbehaving. At a recent Las Vegas show, Adele weighed in, saying: "Have you noticed how people are like, forgetting … show etiquette at the moment? People just throwing shit on stage" – before warning fans not to try it with her.
Billie Eilish meanwhile, says this kind of thing, while "infuriating", is nothing new. "I've been getting hit on stage with things for like, literally, six years," she told the Hollywood Reporter. Dr Kirsty Sedgman, a senior lecturer in theatre at the University of Bristol who specialises in audience research, also cautions against calling it a new trend. "People have always thrown things on stage," says Sedgman, whose latest book, On Being Unreasonable, explores widening divisions in society over how we use public space. "Whether that's fruit as a way to signify displeasure, or softer items like underwear and flowers as a signal of adoration." Back In 1775, a performer in Sheridan's The Rivals stopped the show when he was pelted with an apple.
Adapted from: https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20230712
It is accurate to state that question 1 objectives to assess readers’ ability of:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3090868 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNCERN
Orgão: Pref. Guamaré-RN
Text 1
From Shakespeare to Harry Styles: Have audiences always been rowdy?
By Clare Thorp12th July 2023
From Pink being given a giant wheel of Brie to Harry Syles getting pelled in the face by a mystery object, disruptive music and theatre shows seems to be on the rise. But is it anything new, asks Clare Thorp.
When Harry Styles was pelted with chicken nuggets while on stage at New York's Madison Square Gardens last summer, he took it in his stride. "Interesting approach," smiled Styles, who has also weathered kiwi fruits, Skittles and bunches of flowers while performing. But when a mystery object hit him in the eye at a concert in Vienna last weekend, he wasn't laughing but, rather, wincing in pain.
It was the latest in a string of incidents where audience members have hurled potentially dangerous objects at performers. Earlier this month Drake was hit on the arm by a flying phone. That came days after country singer Kelsea Ballerini was struck in the face with a bracelet. In May, Bebe Rexha was taken to hospital and needed multiple stitches after a phone hit her in the eye. A man, since charged with assault, told police he thought it "would be funny" to try and hit the singer.
It's not just live music seeing disruptive behaviour. In April, police were called to a performance of The Bodyguard musical in Manchester when rowdy audience members reacted with "unprecedented levels of violence" to staff. At other venues there has been everything from "heated arguments" to full-on brawls. And in the US, one fan's disruption of a Broadway play in December 2022 followed several other incidents of audience outbursts.
Across the cultural sphere, it feels like audiences are misbehaving. At a recent Las Vegas show, Adele weighed in, saying: "Have you noticed how people are like, forgetting … show etiquette at the moment? People just throwing shit on stage" – before warning fans not to try it with her.
Billie Eilish meanwhile, says this kind of thing, while "infuriating", is nothing new. "I've been getting hit on stage with things for like, literally, six years," she told the Hollywood Reporter. Dr Kirsty Sedgman, a senior lecturer in theatre at the University of Bristol who specialises in audience research, also cautions against calling it a new trend. "People have always thrown things on stage," says Sedgman, whose latest book, On Being Unreasonable, explores widening divisions in society over how we use public space. "Whether that's fruit as a way to signify displeasure, or softer items like underwear and flowers as a signal of adoration." Back In 1775, a performer in Sheridan's The Rivals stopped the show when he was pelted with an apple.
Adapted from: https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20230712
About the communicative intention of the author, it can be said that:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3085755 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Raciocínio Lógico
Banca: FUNCERN
Orgão: Pref. Guamaré-RN
Provas:

Se Nita é paulista, então Neto não é potiguar. Ou Neto é potiguar, ou José é paraibano. Se Maria não é cearense, Nita é paulista. Ora, nem José é paraibano e nem Assis é carioca. Logo,

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3085754 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Matemática Financeira
Banca: FUNCERN
Orgão: Pref. Guamaré-RN
Provas:

Rafa foi até o Mercadinho Guama-box e levou sua bolsa de moedas para pagar as compras. O quadro abaixo apresenta a quantidade de moedas que ela tinha dentro da bolsa.

VALOR DA MOEDA (R$)

QUANTIDADE DE MOEDAS

0,05

10

0,10

15

0,25

15

0,50

9

1,00

8

O valor total da compra deu R$ 15,30 e Rafa decidiu pagar com a menor quantidade de moedas possível. Nesse caso, a quantidade de moedas utilizada por ela para pagar a compra foi

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3085753 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Matemática
Banca: FUNCERN
Orgão: Pref. Guamaré-RN
Provas:

Se somarmos todos os servidores que ocupam o cargo de Auxiliar de Serviços Gerais (ASG) de três secretarias de Guamaré/RN e dividirmos em grupos de 3 ou de 5 ou de 7 pessoas, sempre restarão 4 ASGs. Com o concurso público que está em andamento no município, a prefeitura planeja que o total de ASGs, somada as três secretarias, chegue a 150. Isso ocorrerá, se e somente se, forem contratados um número de novos ASGs igual a

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3085752 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Raciocínio Lógico
Banca: FUNCERN
Orgão: Pref. Guamaré-RN
Provas:

Ao realizar uma questão de lógica, Marta deparou-se com as seguintes afirmações:

I. R e S são proposições simples;

II. As proposições estão representadas na fórmula:

¬\( R \)^(¬\( S \)\( R \))→¬(\( R \) ^ ¬\( S \))

III. A tabela-verdade que representa a fórmula é:

R

S

¬R

¬S

(¬S →R)

¬R ^ (¬S →R)

(R ^ ¬S)

¬ (R ^ ¬S)

¬R ^ (¬S →R) → ¬ (R ^ ¬S)

V

V

?

F

?

F

F

?

V

V

?

F

?

V

?

?

?

?

F

V

V

F

?

V

F

V

?

?

F

?

V

F

F

?

V

V

Considerando que todo V = 1 e todo F = 0, se Marta somar todos os valores na tabela-verdade representados por ?, encontrará como resultado

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3085751 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Raciocínio Lógico
Banca: FUNCERN
Orgão: Pref. Guamaré-RN
Provas:

A sequência de letras e números, a seguir, obedece a uma determinada regra de criação.

9X

49T

121P

?

Sendo assim, o quarto elemento da sequência será

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas