Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 859 questões.

1846137 Ano: 2019
Disciplina: Educação Física
Banca: FUNDEP
Orgão: Pref. Lagoa Santa-MG

A Educação Física é o componente curricular que tematiza as práticas corporais em suas diversas formas de codificação e significação social. Na Base Nacional Comum Curricular a unidade temática Esportes utiliza um modelo de classificação baseado na lógica interna, tendo como referência os critérios de cooperação, interação com o adversário, desempenho motor e objetivos táticos da ação.

O Esporte de Invasão ou territorial é definido como o(a)

 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1846136 Ano: 2019
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDEP
Orgão: Pref. Lagoa Santa-MG
Provas:

TEXT 2

The taxi, an old Rover smelling of old cigarette smoke, trundled along the empty, country road at an unhurried pace. It was early afternoon at the very end of February, a magic winter day of bitter cold, frost, and pale, cloudless skies. The sun shone, sending long shadows, but there was little warmth in it, and the ploughed fields lay hard as iron. From the chimneys of scattered farmhouses and small stone cottages, smoke rose, straight as columns, up into the still air, and flocks of sheep, heavy with wool and incipient pregnancy, gathered around feeding troughs, stuffed with hay.

Sitting in the back of the taxi, gazing through the dusty window, Penelope Keeling decided that she had never seen the familiar countryside look so beautiful.

The road curved steeply; ahead stood the wooden signpost marking the lane that led to Temple Pudley. The driver slowed and with a painful change of gear, turned, bumping downhill between high and blinding hedges. Moments later they were in the village, with its golden Cotswold stone houses, newsagent butcher, the Sudeley Arms, and the church – set back from the street behind an ancient graveyard and the dark foliage of some suitably gloomy yews. There were few people about. The children were all in school, and the bitter weather kept others indoors. Only an old man, mittened and scarved, walked his ancient dog.

“Which house is it?” the taxi driver inquired over his shoulder.

She leaned forward, ridiculously excited and expectant. “Just a little way on. Through the village. The white gates on the right. They’re open. There! Here we are.”

He turned in through the gates and the car drew up at the back of the house.

She opened the door and got out, drawing her dark blue cape around her against the cold. She opened her bag and found her key, went to unlock the door. Behind her, the taxi driver manhandled open the boot of the car and lifted out her small suitcase. She turned to take it from him, but he held on to it, somewhat concerned.

“is there nobody here to meet you?”

“No. Nobody. I live alone, and everybody thinks I’m still in the hospital.”

“Be all right, will you?”

She smiled into his kindly face. He was quite young, with fair bushy hair. “Of course.”

He hesitated, not wishing to presume. ‘If you want, I’ll carry the case in. Carry it upstairs, if needs be.’

“Oh, that’s kind of you. But I can easily manage…”

“No bother.” He told her, and followed her into the kitchen. She opened the door, and led him up the narrow, cottage stairs. Everything smelt clinically clean. Mrs. Plackett, bless her heart, had not been wasting time during the few days of Penelope’s absence. She quite liked it when Penelope went away, because then she could do things like wash the white paint of the bannisters, and boil dusters, and buff up the brass and silver.

Her bedroom door stood ajar. She went in, and the young man followed her, setting her case on the floor.

“Anything else I can do?” he asked.

“Not a thing. Now, how much do I owe you?”

He told her, looking shamefaced, as though it were an embarrassment to him. She paid him, and told him to keep the change. He thanked her, and they went back down the stairs.

But still he hung about, seeming reluctant to leave. He probably, she told herself, had some old granny, of his own, for whom he felt the same sort of responsibility.

“You’ll be all right, then?”

“I promise you. And tomorrow my friend Mrs. Plackett will come. So then I won’t be alone anymore.”

This, for some reason, reassured him. “I’ll be off then.’”

“No trouble.”

PILCHER, Rosamund. The shell seekers. London: Coronet Books, Hodder and Stoughton,1989. p. 9-11.

In the phrase “for whom he felt the same sort of responsibility.”, the pronoun “whom” refers to the

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1846135 Ano: 2019
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDEP
Orgão: Pref. Lagoa Santa-MG
Provas:

TEXT 2

The taxi, an old Rover smelling of old cigarette smoke, trundled along the empty, country road at an unhurried pace. It was early afternoon at the very end of February, a magic winter day of bitter cold, frost, and pale, cloudless skies. The sun shone, sending long shadows, but there was little warmth in it, and the ploughed fields lay hard as iron. From the chimneys of scattered farmhouses and small stone cottages, smoke rose, straight as columns, up into the still air, and flocks of sheep, heavy with wool and incipient pregnancy, gathered around feeding troughs, stuffed with hay.

Sitting in the back of the taxi, gazing through the dusty window, Penelope Keeling decided that she had never seen the familiar countryside look so beautiful.

The road curved steeply; ahead stood the wooden signpost marking the lane that led to Temple Pudley. The driver slowed and with a painful change of gear, turned, bumping downhill between high and blinding hedges. Moments later they were in the village, with its golden Cotswold stone houses, newsagent butcher, the Sudeley Arms, and the church – set back from the street behind an ancient graveyard and the dark foliage of some suitably gloomy yews. There were few people about. The children were all in school, and the bitter weather kept others indoors. Only an old man, mittened and scarved, walked his ancient dog.

“Which house is it?” the taxi driver inquired over his shoulder.

She leaned forward, ridiculously excited and expectant. “Just a little way on. Through the village. The white gates on the right. They’re open. There! Here we are.”

He turned in through the gates and the car drew up at the back of the house.

She opened the door and got out, drawing her dark blue cape around her against the cold. She opened her bag and found her key, went to unlock the door. Behind her, the taxi driver manhandled open the boot of the car and lifted out her small suitcase. She turned to take it from him, but he held on to it, somewhat concerned.

“is there nobody here to meet you?”

“No. Nobody. I live alone, and everybody thinks I’m still in the hospital.”

“Be all right, will you?”

She smiled into his kindly face. He was quite young, with fair bushy hair. “Of course.”

He hesitated, not wishing to presume. ‘If you want, I’ll carry the case in. Carry it upstairs, if needs be.’

“Oh, that’s kind of you. But I can easily manage…”

“No bother.” He told her, and followed her into the kitchen. She opened the door, and led him up the narrow, cottage stairs. Everything smelt clinically clean. Mrs. Plackett, bless her heart, had not been wasting time during the few days of Penelope’s absence. She quite liked it when Penelope went away, because then she could do things like wash the white paint of the bannisters, and boil dusters, and buff up the brass and silver.

Her bedroom door stood ajar. She went in, and the young man followed her, setting her case on the floor.

“Anything else I can do?” he asked.

“Not a thing. Now, how much do I owe you?”

He told her, looking shamefaced, as though it were an embarrassment to him. She paid him, and told him to keep the change. He thanked her, and they went back down the stairs.

But still he hung about, seeming reluctant to leave. He probably, she told herself, had some old granny, of his own, for whom he felt the same sort of responsibility.

“You’ll be all right, then?”

“I promise you. And tomorrow my friend Mrs. Plackett will come. So then I won’t be alone anymore.”

This, for some reason, reassured him. “I’ll be off then.’”

“No trouble.”

PILCHER, Rosamund. The shell seekers. London: Coronet Books, Hodder and Stoughton,1989. p. 9-11.

In the phrase “Only an old man, mittened and scarved”, the two words “mittened” and “scarved” are

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1846133 Ano: 2019
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDEP
Orgão: Pref. Lagoa Santa-MG
Provas:

TEXT 2

The taxi, an old Rover smelling of old cigarette smoke, trundled along the empty, country road at an unhurried pace. It was early afternoon at the very end of February, a magic winter day of bitter cold, frost, and pale, cloudless skies. The sun shone, sending long shadows, but there was little warmth in it, and the ploughed fields lay hard as iron. From the chimneys of scattered farmhouses and small stone cottages, smoke rose, straight as columns, up into the still air, and flocks of sheep, heavy with wool and incipient pregnancy, gathered around feeding troughs, stuffed with hay.

Sitting in the back of the taxi, gazing through the dusty window, Penelope Keeling decided that she had never seen the familiar countryside look so beautiful.

The road curved steeply; ahead stood the wooden signpost marking the lane that led to Temple Pudley. The driver slowed and with a painful change of gear, turned, bumping downhill between high and blinding hedges. Moments later they were in the village, with its golden Cotswold stone houses, newsagent butcher, the Sudeley Arms, and the church – set back from the street behind an ancient graveyard and the dark foliage of some suitably gloomy yews. There were few people about. The children were all in school, and the bitter weather kept others indoors. Only an old man, mittened and scarved, walked his ancient dog.

“Which house is it?” the taxi driver inquired over his shoulder.

She leaned forward, ridiculously excited and expectant. “Just a little way on. Through the village. The white gates on the right. They’re open. There! Here we are.”

He turned in through the gates and the car drew up at the back of the house.

She opened the door and got out, drawing her dark blue cape around her against the cold. She opened her bag and found her key, went to unlock the door. Behind her, the taxi driver manhandled open the boot of the car and lifted out her small suitcase. She turned to take it from him, but he held on to it, somewhat concerned.

“is there nobody here to meet you?”

“No. Nobody. I live alone, and everybody thinks I’m still in the hospital.”

“Be all right, will you?”

She smiled into his kindly face. He was quite young, with fair bushy hair. “Of course.”

He hesitated, not wishing to presume. ‘If you want, I’ll carry the case in. Carry it upstairs, if needs be.’

“Oh, that’s kind of you. But I can easily manage…”

“No bother.” He told her, and followed her into the kitchen. She opened the door, and led him up the narrow, cottage stairs. Everything smelt clinically clean. Mrs. Plackett, bless her heart, had not been wasting time during the few days of Penelope’s absence. She quite liked it when Penelope went away, because then she could do things like wash the white paint of the bannisters, and boil dusters, and buff up the brass and silver.

Her bedroom door stood ajar. She went in, and the young man followed her, setting her case on the floor.

“Anything else I can do?” he asked.

“Not a thing. Now, how much do I owe you?”

He told her, looking shamefaced, as though it were an embarrassment to him. She paid him, and told him to keep the change. He thanked her, and they went back down the stairs.

But still he hung about, seeming reluctant to leave. He probably, she told herself, had some old granny, of his own, for whom he felt the same sort of responsibility.

“You’ll be all right, then?”

“I promise you. And tomorrow my friend Mrs. Plackett will come. So then I won’t be alone anymore.”

This, for some reason, reassured him. “I’ll be off then.’”

“No trouble.”

PILCHER, Rosamund. The shell seekers. London: Coronet Books, Hodder and Stoughton,1989. p. 9-11.

The sentence “No. Nobody. I live alone, and everybody thinks I’m still in the hospital.”, if reported will read as:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1846132 Ano: 2019
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDEP
Orgão: Pref. Lagoa Santa-MG
Provas:

TEXT 2

The taxi, an old Rover smelling of old cigarette smoke, trundled along the empty, country road at an unhurried pace. It was early afternoon at the very end of February, a magic winter day of bitter cold, frost, and pale, cloudless skies. The sun shone, sending long shadows, but there was little warmth in it, and the ploughed fields lay hard as iron. From the chimneys of scattered farmhouses and small stone cottages, smoke rose, straight as columns, up into the still air, and flocks of sheep, heavy with wool and incipient pregnancy, gathered around feeding troughs, stuffed with hay.

Sitting in the back of the taxi, gazing through the dusty window, Penelope Keeling decided that she had never seen the familiar countryside look so beautiful.

The road curved steeply; ahead stood the wooden signpost marking the lane that led to Temple Pudley. The driver slowed and with a painful change of gear, turned, bumping downhill between high and blinding hedges. Moments later they were in the village, with its golden Cotswold stone houses, newsagent butcher, the Sudeley Arms, and the church – set back from the street behind an ancient graveyard and the dark foliage of some suitably gloomy yews. There were few people about. The children were all in school, and the bitter weather kept others indoors. Only an old man, mittened and scarved, walked his ancient dog.

“Which house is it?” the taxi driver inquired over his shoulder.

She leaned forward, ridiculously excited and expectant. “Just a little way on. Through the village. The white gates on the right. They’re open. There! Here we are.”

He turned in through the gates and the car drew up at the back of the house.

She opened the door and got out, drawing her dark blue cape around her against the cold. She opened her bag and found her key, went to unlock the door. Behind her, the taxi driver manhandled open the boot of the car and lifted out her small suitcase. She turned to take it from him, but he held on to it, somewhat concerned.

“is there nobody here to meet you?”

“No. Nobody. I live alone, and everybody thinks I’m still in the hospital.”

“Be all right, will you?”

She smiled into his kindly face. He was quite young, with fair bushy hair. “Of course.”

He hesitated, not wishing to presume. ‘If you want, I’ll carry the case in. Carry it upstairs, if needs be.’

“Oh, that’s kind of you. But I can easily manage…”

“No bother.” He told her, and followed her into the kitchen. She opened the door, and led him up the narrow, cottage stairs. Everything smelt clinically clean. Mrs. Plackett, bless her heart, had not been wasting time during the few days of Penelope’s absence. She quite liked it when Penelope went away, because then she could do things like wash the white paint of the bannisters, and boil dusters, and buff up the brass and silver.

Her bedroom door stood ajar. She went in, and the young man followed her, setting her case on the floor.

“Anything else I can do?” he asked.

“Not a thing. Now, how much do I owe you?”

He told her, looking shamefaced, as though it were an embarrassment to him. She paid him, and told him to keep the change. He thanked her, and they went back down the stairs.

But still he hung about, seeming reluctant to leave. He probably, she told herself, had some old granny, of his own, for whom he felt the same sort of responsibility.

“You’ll be all right, then?”

“I promise you. And tomorrow my friend Mrs. Plackett will come. So then I won’t be alone anymore.”

This, for some reason, reassured him. “I’ll be off then.’”

“No trouble.”

PILCHER, Rosamund. The shell seekers. London: Coronet Books, Hodder and Stoughton,1989. p. 9-11.

In the sentence “The taxi, an old Rover smelling of old cigarette smoke, trundled along the empty, country road at an unhurried pace”, the words “empty” and “country” are used as

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1846130 Ano: 2019
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDEP
Orgão: Pref. Lagoa Santa-MG
Provas:

TEXT 2

The taxi, an old Rover smelling of old cigarette smoke, trundled along the empty, country road at an unhurried pace. It was early afternoon at the very end of February, a magic winter day of bitter cold, frost, and pale, cloudless skies. The sun shone, sending long shadows, but there was little warmth in it, and the ploughed fields lay hard as iron. From the chimneys of scattered farmhouses and small stone cottages, smoke rose, straight as columns, up into the still air, and flocks of sheep, heavy with wool and incipient pregnancy, gathered around feeding troughs, stuffed with hay.

Sitting in the back of the taxi, gazing through the dusty window, Penelope Keeling decided that she had never seen the familiar countryside look so beautiful.

The road curved steeply; ahead stood the wooden signpost marking the lane that led to Temple Pudley. The driver slowed and with a painful change of gear, turned, bumping downhill between high and blinding hedges. Moments later they were in the village, with its golden Cotswold stone houses, newsagent butcher, the Sudeley Arms, and the church – set back from the street behind an ancient graveyard and the dark foliage of some suitably gloomy yews. There were few people about. The children were all in school, and the bitter weather kept others indoors. Only an old man, mittened and scarved, walked his ancient dog.

“Which house is it?” the taxi driver inquired over his shoulder.

She leaned forward, ridiculously excited and expectant. “Just a little way on. Through the village. The white gates on the right. They’re open. There! Here we are.”

He turned in through the gates and the car drew up at the back of the house.

She opened the door and got out, drawing her dark blue cape around her against the cold. She opened her bag and found her key, went to unlock the door. Behind her, the taxi driver manhandled open the boot of the car and lifted out her small suitcase. She turned to take it from him, but he held on to it, somewhat concerned.

“is there nobody here to meet you?”

“No. Nobody. I live alone, and everybody thinks I’m still in the hospital.”

“Be all right, will you?”

She smiled into his kindly face. He was quite young, with fair bushy hair. “Of course.”

He hesitated, not wishing to presume. ‘If you want, I’ll carry the case in. Carry it upstairs, if needs be.’

“Oh, that’s kind of you. But I can easily manage…”

“No bother.” He told her, and followed her into the kitchen. She opened the door, and led him up the narrow, cottage stairs. Everything smelt clinically clean. Mrs. Plackett, bless her heart, had not been wasting time during the few days of Penelope’s absence. She quite liked it when Penelope went away, because then she could do things like wash the white paint of the bannisters, and boil dusters, and buff up the brass and silver.

Her bedroom door stood ajar. She went in, and the young man followed her, setting her case on the floor.

“Anything else I can do?” he asked.

“Not a thing. Now, how much do I owe you?”

He told her, looking shamefaced, as though it were an embarrassment to him. She paid him, and told him to keep the change. He thanked her, and they went back down the stairs.

But still he hung about, seeming reluctant to leave. He probably, she told herself, had some old granny, of his own, for whom he felt the same sort of responsibility.

“You’ll be all right, then?”

“I promise you. And tomorrow my friend Mrs. Plackett will come. So then I won’t be alone anymore.”

This, for some reason, reassured him. “I’ll be off then.’”

“No trouble.”

PILCHER, Rosamund. The shell seekers. London: Coronet Books, Hodder and Stoughton,1989. p. 9-11.

The taxi driver learnt during their conversation that the narrator was

 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1846129 Ano: 2019
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDEP
Orgão: Pref. Lagoa Santa-MG
Provas:

One of the myths to be ignored when one decides to learn a language is that

 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1846128 Ano: 2019
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDEP
Orgão: Pref. Lagoa Santa-MG
Provas:

TEXT 1

Learning a language – things you need to know

Thinking about learning a foreign language?

From ignoring your age to avoiding the F-word, our

multilingual experts share their tips

Holly Young

1. Make realistic, specific goals

You have decided to learn another language. Now what? On our recent live chat our panellists first piece of advice was to ask yourself: what do you want to achieve and by when? Donavan Whyte, vice president of enterprise and education at Rosetta Stone, says: “Language learning is best when broken down into manageable goals that are achievable over a few months. This is far more motivating and realistic.”

You might be feeling wildly optimistic when you start but aiming to be fluent is not necessarily the best idea. Phil McGowan, director at Verbmaps, recommends making these goals tangible and specific: “Why not set yourself a target of being able to read a newspaper article in the target language without having to look up any words in the dictionary?”

2. Remind yourself why you are learning

It might sound obvious, but recognising exactly why you want to learn a language is really important. Alex Rawlings, a language teacher now learning his 13th language, says: “Motivation is usually the first thing to go, especially among students who are teaching themselves.” To keep the momentum going he suggests writing down 10 reasons you are learning a language and sticking it to the front of the file you are using: “I turn to these in times of self-doubt.”

3. Focus on exactly what you want to learn

Often the discussion around how to learn a language slides into a debate about so-called traditional v tech approaches. For Aaron Ralby, director of Linguisticator, this debate misses the point: “The question is not so much about online v offline or app v book. Rather it should be how can we assemble the necessary elements of language for a particular objective, present them in a user-friendly way, and provide a means for students to understand those elements.”

When signing up to a particular method or approach, think about the substance behind the style or technology. “Ultimately,” he says, “the learning takes place inside you rather that outside, regardless of whether it’s a computer or book or a teacher in front of you.”

4. Read for pleasure

For many of our panellists, reading was not only great for making progress, but one of the most rewarding aspects of the learning experience. Alex Rawlings explains that reading for pleasure “exposes you to all sorts of vocabulary that you won’t find in day-to-day life, and normalises otherwise baffling and complicated grammatical structures. The first book you ever finish in a foreign language is a monumental achievement that you’ll remember for a long time.”

5. Learn vocabulary in context

Memorising lists of vocabulary can be challenging, not to mention potentially dull. Ed Cooke, co-founder and chief executive of Memrise, believes that association is key to retaining new words: “Agreat way to build vocabulary is to make sure the lists you’re learning come from situations or texts that you have experienced yourself, so that the content is always relevant and connects to background experience.”

6. Ignore the myths: age is just a number

You are a monolingual adult: have you missed the language boat? Ralby argues “a key language myth is that it’s harder as an adult”. Adults and children may learn in different ways but that shouldn’t deter you from committing to learning another language. “Languages are simultaneously organic and systematic. As children we learn languages organically and instinctively; as adults we can learn them systematically.”

7. Do some revision of your native language

Speaking your first language may be second nature, but that doesn’t necessarily mean you understand it well. Kerstin Hammes, editor of the Fluent Language Blog, believes you can’t make good progress in a second language until you understand your own. “I think understanding your native language and just generally how language works is so essential before you launch yourself at a bunch of foreign phrases.”

8. Don’t underestimate the importance of translation

Different approaches may be necessary at different stages of the learning process. Once you have reached a certain level of proficiency and can say quite a bit, fairly accurately, Rebecca Braun, senior lecturer in German studies at Lancaster University, says it is typical to feel a slowing down in progress. “Translation,” she says, “is such an important exercise for helping you get over a certain plateau that you will reach as a language learner ... Translation exercises don’t allow you to paraphrase and force the learner on to the next level.”.

Available at: . Accessed on: November 8th, 2018 (Adapted).

One of the ways Ed Cooke advises as a good strategy for learning vocabulary is

 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1846127 Ano: 2019
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDEP
Orgão: Pref. Lagoa Santa-MG
Provas:

According to Alex Rawlings, reading

 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1846126 Ano: 2019
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDEP
Orgão: Pref. Lagoa Santa-MG
Provas:

According to one language teacher, the main thing when one decides to learn a different language is

 

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Questão presente nas seguintes provas