Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 50 questões.

2239506 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CETAP
Orgão: Pref. Tailândia-PA
Provas:
Na oração "We must help one another", a expressão "one another" é considerada um:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2239492 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CETAP
Orgão: Pref. Tailândia-PA
Provas:
How Ebola changed the world
By Smitha Mundasad
(Health reporter, BBC News)
http://www.bbc.com/news/health-31982078 23 March 2015
One year ago the World Health Organization officially declared there was an outbreak of Ebola across Guinea.
The disease had already claimed dozens of lives and was on its way to neighbouring countries. This tiny virus, invisible to the naked eye, went on to kill more than 10,000 people across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone in the 12 months that followed. Numbers are now going down - but we are still far from zero. And the viral menace hasleft a permanent mark on the world.
The humans who couldn't be touched
Ebola relies on intimate social interaction to ensure its continued survival - it is passed on through close contact with the bodily fluids of infected individuais.
This means people who care for the sick are most vulnerable to the disease.
The most simple human touch - a handshake or a hug - was quickly discouraged across the three worst affected countries. Liberia lost its traditional finger-snap greeting.
And the fabric of the final goodbye changed too. Traditional burial ceremonies were re-written, mourning practices - such as washing the bodies of the deceased - were banned.
Now a family can expect an Ebola response team to turn up, in full spacesuit-like gear, to take bodies away in the most dignified way possible in the circumstances.
At the height of the outbreak, entire communities were quarantined. And for some in Sierra Leone, Christmas was cancelled.
The long-term impact of these disruptions to deep-seated human traditions is not yet known. Psychologists are concerned that suspicions that other people may harbour the deadly virus will take some time to melt away.
And if they disappear too quickly, this would hamper efforts to stamp out remaining cases.
Lost knowledge
As the crisis deepened, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea shut their schools. A whole generation of children will have missed some six months of education. Research by the campaign group Global Business Coalition for Education suggests up to 5 million children were denied classes.
And many are unlikely to return, the report warns.
The risk of children being forced to work also increases as families rely on remaining members to put food and money on the "table.
Viral swat team
Scientists believe the first person to have succumbed to the disease in this outbreak was a two-year-old in a remote part of Guinea. But it took a furlher three months for the WHO to officially declare an outbreak and five more to announce a public health emergency.
Many thought the world reacted too late.
The WHO admits it was too slow and agrees the organisation needs to change.
Margaret Chan, WHO director-general, said at arare emergency meeting in January: "The world, including WHO, was too slow to see what was unfolding before us."
Ideas about how to prevent anything similar happening again include the creation of a dedicated fund for emergencies and a rapid-response workforce.
But details are yet to be ironed out - will there be doctors on standby should another outbreak erupt? WiII teams be dotted around potential hot-spots to avoid previous delays?
Ebola innovation
Vaccines and drugs often take more than a decade to develop. But an unprecedented decision by the WHO to support the use of relatively untested drugs, followed by a unique collaboration between scientists, public health organisations and drug companies resulted in trials being set up in a matter of months.
Immunisations are already being given on a trial basis in the worst affected countries. Never before has the world seen relatively experimental medicines being used on this scale.
While none has yet been proven to work in large populations, the process has been accelerated at an unheard-of speed.
This calls into question whether medicines for other di se ases could be made in a more timely fashion, particularly if academics, politicians and scientists were encouraged to work together in this way again.
And innovation does not stop at treatments. A group of tech volunteers recently came together with Google and MSF to create an Ebola-prooftablet device.
This can be dunked in chlorine to kill the virus, withstand storms and does not rely on a continuous supply of electricity.
There is hope these devices will be used in other difficult settings too - from cholera outbreaks to refugee camps.
The virus that never goes away
But most agree it was not drugs or fancy innovations that brought numbers down.
Local volunteers going house-to-house to explain the virus, or tirelessly burying bodies in the safest possible way, were crucial to stop the spread.
Communities accepting the realities of the virus and changing their everyday lives, and families allowing their loved ones to be taken to isolated treatment centres ali played a strong role.
Weak health systems were bolstered - Liberia only had some 60 doctors to treat its entire population before the outbreak began. But an influx of local volunteers and international teams helped.
Despite these efforts some scientists say there is a chance the virus will never go away. If cases do not get to zero, it could become endemic - part of the fabric of diseases present in countries at a low leveI.
And other outbreaks are likely.
But the hope is the world will be beUer prepared and have learnt to pay greater attention, should Ebola, or another disease like it, strike again.
Após a leitura do texto, pode-se afirmar que:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2239484 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CETAP
Orgão: Pref. Tailândia-PA
Provas:
China's One Child Policy
One Child Policy in China Oesigned to Limit Population Growth
(http://geography.about.com/od/populationgeography/a/onechild.htm)
Sy Matt Rosenberg
China's one child policy was established by Chinese leader Oeng Xiaoping in 1979 to limit communist China's population growth. Although designated a "temporary measure," it continues a uarter-century after its establishment. The policy limits couples to one child. Fines, pressures to abort a pregnancy, and even forced sterilization accompanied second or subsequent pregnancies.
It is not an all-encompassing rule because it has always been restricted to ethnic Han Chinese living in urban areas.
Citizens living in rural areas and minorities living in China are not subject to the law. However, the rule has been estimated to have reduced population growth in the country of 1.3 billion by as much as 300 million people over its first twenty years.
This rule has caused a disdain for female infants; abortion, neglect, abandonment, and even infanticide have been known to occur to female infants. The result of such Oraconian family planning has resulted in the disparate ratio of 114 males for every 100 females among babies from birth through children four years of age. Normally, 105 males are naturally born for every 100 females.
Recent Effects ofthe One Child Law
Now that millions of sibling-Iess people in China are now young adults in or nearing their child-bearing years, a special provision allows millions of couples to have two children legally. If a couple is composed of two people without siblings, then they may have two children of their own, thus preventing too dramatic of a population decrease.
Although IUOs, sterilization, and abortion (legal in China) are China's most popular forms of birth control, over the past few years, China has provided more education and support for alternative birth control methods.
Statistically, China's total fertility rate (the number of births per woman) is 1.7, much higherthan slowly-declining Germanyat 1.4 but lower than the U.S. at 2.1 (2.1 births per woman is the replacement levei of fertility, representing a stable population, exclusive of migration).
In 2007, there were reports that in the southwestern Guangxi Autonomous Region of China, officials were forcing pregnant women without permission to give birth to have abortions and levying steep fines on families violating the law. As a result, riots broke out and some may have been killed, including population control officials.
The Future of China's One Child Law
Minister of the State Commission of Population and Family Planning Zhang Weiqing confirmed in early 2006 that China's one child policy is consistent with the nation's plan for population growth and would continue indefinitely. He denied rumors that the policy become less stringent to permit a second child to the general population.
Na oração: "Now that millions of sibling-Iess people in China are now young adults in or nearing their child-bearing years, a special provision allows millions of couples to have two children legally", a palavra em "sibling-Iess" significa:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2239481 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CETAP
Orgão: Pref. Tailândia-PA
Provas:
How Ebola changed the world
By Smitha Mundasad
(Health reporter, BBC News)
http://www.bbc.com/news/health-31982078 23 March 2015
One year ago the World Health Organization officially declared there was an outbreak of Ebola across Guinea.
The disease had already claimed dozens of lives and was on its way to neighbouring countries. This tiny virus, invisible to the naked eye, went on to kill more than 10,000 people across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone in the 12 months that followed. Numbers are now going down - but we are still far from zero. And the viral menace hasleft a permanent mark on the world.
The humans who couldn't be touched
Ebola relies on intimate social interaction to ensure its continued survival - it is passed on through close contact with the bodily fluids of infected individuais.
This means people who care for the sick are most vulnerable to the disease.
The most simple human touch - a handshake or a hug - was quickly discouraged across the three worst affected countries. Liberia lost its traditional finger-snap greeting.
And the fabric of the final goodbye changed too. Traditional burial ceremonies were re-written, mourning practices - such as washing the bodies of the deceased - were banned.
Now a family can expect an Ebola response team to turn up, in full spacesuit-like gear, to take bodies away in the most dignified way possible in the circumstances.
At the height of the outbreak, entire communities were quarantined. And for some in Sierra Leone, Christmas was cancelled.
The long-term impact of these disruptions to deep-seated human traditions is not yet known. Psychologists are concerned that suspicions that other people may harbour the deadly virus will take some time to melt away.
And if they disappear too quickly, this would hamper efforts to stamp out remaining cases.
Lost knowledge
As the crisis deepened, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea shut their schools. A whole generation of children will have missed some six months of education. Research by the campaign group Global Business Coalition for Education suggests up to 5 million children were denied classes.
And many are unlikely to return, the report warns.
The risk of children being forced to work also increases as families rely on remaining members to put food and money on the "table.
Viral swat team
Scientists believe the first person to have succumbed to the disease in this outbreak was a two-year-old in a remote part of Guinea. But it took a furlher three months for the WHO to officially declare an outbreak and five more to announce a public health emergency.
Many thought the world reacted too late.
The WHO admits it was too slow and agrees the organisation needs to change.
Margaret Chan, WHO director-general, said at arare emergency meeting in January: "The world, including WHO, was too slow to see what was unfolding before us."
Ideas about how to prevent anything similar happening again include the creation of a dedicated fund for emergencies and a rapid-response workforce.
But details are yet to be ironed out - will there be doctors on standby should another outbreak erupt? WiII teams be dotted around potential hot-spots to avoid previous delays?
Ebola innovation
Vaccines and drugs often take more than a decade to develop. But an unprecedented decision by the WHO to support the use of relatively untested drugs, followed by a unique collaboration between scientists, public health organisations and drug companies resulted in trials being set up in a matter of months.
Immunisations are already being given on a trial basis in the worst affected countries. Never before has the world seen relatively experimental medicines being used on this scale.
While none has yet been proven to work in large populations, the process has been accelerated at an unheard-of speed.
This calls into question whether medicines for other di se ases could be made in a more timely fashion, particularly if academics, politicians and scientists were encouraged to work together in this way again.
And innovation does not stop at treatments. A group of tech volunteers recently came together with Google and MSF to create an Ebola-prooftablet device.
This can be dunked in chlorine to kill the virus, withstand storms and does not rely on a continuous supply of electricity.
There is hope these devices will be used in other difficult settings too - from cholera outbreaks to refugee camps.
The virus that never goes away
But most agree it was not drugs or fancy innovations that brought numbers down.
Local volunteers going house-to-house to explain the virus, or tirelessly burying bodies in the safest possible way, were crucial to stop the spread.
Communities accepting the realities of the virus and changing their everyday lives, and families allowing their loved ones to be taken to isolated treatment centres ali played a strong role.
Weak health systems were bolstered - Liberia only had some 60 doctors to treat its entire population before the outbreak began. But an influx of local volunteers and international teams helped.
Despite these efforts some scientists say there is a chance the virus will never go away. If cases do not get to zero, it could become endemic - part of the fabric of diseases present in countries at a low leveI.
And other outbreaks are likely.
But the hope is the world will be beUer prepared and have learnt to pay greater attention, should Ebola, or another disease like it, strike again.
Após a leitura do texto, assinale a alternativa correta:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
A Grande Heresia do Simples
Em seu livro Tristes Trópicos, Lévi-Strauss descreve os seus colegas brasileiros: "Qualquer que fosse o campo do saber, só a teoria mais recente merecia ser considerada. ( ... ) Nunca liam as obras originais e mostravam um entusiasmo permanente pelos novos pratos. ( ... ) Partilhar uma teoria conhecida era o mesmo que usar um vestido pela segunda vez, corria-se o risco de um vexame".
Cultivamos essa paixão pelas navegações intergalácticas e pelo modismo. Assim, acaba tudo muito complicado, inclusive na educação. Ouso arrostar a cultura nacional. Cometo a Grande Heresia do Simples: tento demonstrar que a educação brasileira precisa de um "feijão com arroz" benfeito, nada mirabolante, nada nos espaços siderais. Vejamos a receita que deu certo alhures.
A escola precisa de metas. E que sejam poucas, claras, estáveis e compartilhadas. Se cada um rema para o seu lado, o barco fica à deriva.
A escola tem a cara do diretor, o principal responsável pela criação de um ambiente estimulante e produtivo. Daí o extremo cuidado na sua escolha. Eleição por professores não será pior que indicação política? E, uma vez escolhido, o diretor precisa de autonomia, de par com cobrança firme do que for combinado.
Boa gestão é essencial. Nem empresas, nem paróquias, nem escolas se administram sem dominar os princípios e técnicas apropriados. Ademais, as secretarias não devem atrapalhar, criando burocracias infinitas.
O professor tem de dominar o assunto que vai ensinar e saber como dar aula. Infelizmente, as faculdades de educação acham isso irrelevante.
Prêmios e penalidades. De alguma forma, o bom desempenho do professor deve ser recompensado. E, se falhar, que venham os puxões de orelha. Por que a atividade mais crítica para o futuro do país é uma das poucas em que prevalece a impunidade.
Ensinou a teoria ou o princípio? Então, que sejam aplicados em problemas práticos e realistas. Diz a ciência cognitiva que sem aplicar não se aprende.
Nova idéia? Então mostre sua conexão com alguma coisa que o aluno já sabe. Isso se chama "contextualizar". Pelo menos, que não se ensine nada sem mostrar para que serve. Se o professor não sabe, como pode suceder na matemática, é melhor não ensinar. É preciso ensinar menos, para os alunos aprenderem mais. O tsunami curricular impede que se aprenda o que quer que seja. Ouve-se falar de tudo, mas não se domina nada. E como só gostamos do que entendemos, no ritmo vertiginoso em que disparam os assuntos, não é possível gostar e, portanto, aprender o que quer que seja.
Valores e cidadania se aprendem na escola, tanto quanto a matéria ensinada. Só que não no currículo ou em sermões, mas na forma pela qual a escola funciona. Escola tolerante e justa ensina essas virtudes. Aprende-se pelo exemplo da própria escola e dos professores. Tão simples quanto isso. Com bagunça na aula não se aprende. Foi o que disseram os próprios alunos, em uma pesquisa do Instituto Positivo (confirmada por outros estudos). A escola precisa enfrentar com firmeza a assombração da indisciplina.
Sem avaliação, a escola faz voo cego. Nossos sistemas de avaliação são excelentes. Mas ainda são pouco usados, seja pelos professores, pela escola ou pelas secretarias. É pena.
A tecnologia pode ajudar, não há boas razões para desdenhá-Ia. Mostra o Pisa: na mão dos alunos, produz bons resultados. Mas não é uma ferramenta para alavancar mudanças. Escola travada não vai mudar com computadores, tablets ou smartphones. Pior, dentro da escola, escoam-se décadas e ela continua um elefante branco, incapaz de promover avanços na qualidade. E aos pais cabe vigiar. Conforme o caso, apoiando ou cobrando.
O currículo é ler com fluência, entender o lido, escrever corretamente, usar regra de três, calcular áreas, volumes e um juro simples, ler gráficos e tabelas ... Só depois de dominado isso podemos ir para as guerras púnicas, derivadas e integrais, reis da França, afluentes do Amazonas e a infinidade de bichinhos do livro de biologia.
Onde está a complicação? Fazer bem o "feijão com arroz" seria uma revolução no nosso ensino. Mas, para muitos, o simples é a Grande Heresia.
(Fonte: CASTRO, Claudio de Moura. Veja-21 de outubro 2015)
Todas as palavras entre parênteses estão classificada~ corretamente, exceto:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2239472 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CETAP
Orgão: Pref. Tailândia-PA
Provas:
How Ebola changed the world
By Smitha Mundasad
(Health reporter, BBC News)
http://www.bbc.com/news/health-31982078 23 March 2015
One year ago the World Health Organization officially declared there was an outbreak of Ebola across Guinea.
The disease had already claimed dozens of lives and was on its way to neighbouring countries. This tiny virus, invisible to the naked eye, went on to kill more than 10,000 people across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone in the 12 months that followed. Numbers are now going down - but we are still far from zero. And the viral menace hasleft a permanent mark on the world.
The humans who couldn't be touched
Ebola relies on intimate social interaction to ensure its continued survival - it is passed on through close contact with the bodily fluids of infected individuais.
This means people who care for the sick are most vulnerable to the disease.
The most simple human touch - a handshake or a hug - was quickly discouraged across the three worst affected countries. Liberia lost its traditional finger-snap greeting.
And the fabric of the final goodbye changed too. Traditional burial ceremonies were re-written, mourning practices - such as washing the bodies of the deceased - were banned.
Now a family can expect an Ebola response team to turn up, in full spacesuit-like gear, to take bodies away in the most dignified way possible in the circumstances.
At the height of the outbreak, entire communities were quarantined. And for some in Sierra Leone, Christmas was cancelled.
The long-term impact of these disruptions to deep-seated human traditions is not yet known. Psychologists are concerned that suspicions that other people may harbour the deadly virus will take some time to melt away.
And if they disappear too quickly, this would hamper efforts to stamp out remaining cases.
Lost knowledge
As the crisis deepened, Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea shut their schools. A whole generation of children will have missed some six months of education. Research by the campaign group Global Business Coalition for Education suggests up to 5 million children were denied classes.
And many are unlikely to return, the report warns.
The risk of children being forced to work also increases as families rely on remaining members to put food and money on the "table.
Viral swat team
Scientists believe the first person to have succumbed to the disease in this outbreak was a two-year-old in a remote part of Guinea. But it took a furlher three months for the WHO to officially declare an outbreak and five more to announce a public health emergency.
Many thought the world reacted too late.
The WHO admits it was too slow and agrees the organisation needs to change.
Margaret Chan, WHO director-general, said at arare emergency meeting in January: "The world, including WHO, was too slow to see what was unfolding before us."
Ideas about how to prevent anything similar happening again include the creation of a dedicated fund for emergencies and a rapid-response workforce.
But details are yet to be ironed out - will there be doctors on standby should another outbreak erupt? WiII teams be dotted around potential hot-spots to avoid previous delays?
Ebola innovation
Vaccines and drugs often take more than a decade to develop. But an unprecedented decision by the WHO to support the use of relatively untested drugs, followed by a unique collaboration between scientists, public health organisations and drug companies resulted in trials being set up in a matter of months.
Immunisations are already being given on a trial basis in the worst affected countries. Never before has the world seen relatively experimental medicines being used on this scale.
While none has yet been proven to work in large populations, the process has been accelerated at an unheard-of speed.
This calls into question whether medicines for other di se ases could be made in a more timely fashion, particularly if academics, politicians and scientists were encouraged to work together in this way again.
And innovation does not stop at treatments. A group of tech volunteers recently came together with Google and MSF to create an Ebola-prooftablet device.
This can be dunked in chlorine to kill the virus, withstand storms and does not rely on a continuous supply of electricity.
There is hope these devices will be used in other difficult settings too - from cholera outbreaks to refugee camps.
The virus that never goes away
But most agree it was not drugs or fancy innovations that brought numbers down.
Local volunteers going house-to-house to explain the virus, or tirelessly burying bodies in the safest possible way, were crucial to stop the spread.
Communities accepting the realities of the virus and changing their everyday lives, and families allowing their loved ones to be taken to isolated treatment centres ali played a strong role.
Weak health systems were bolstered - Liberia only had some 60 doctors to treat its entire population before the outbreak began. But an influx of local volunteers and international teams helped.
Despite these efforts some scientists say there is a chance the virus will never go away. If cases do not get to zero, it could become endemic - part of the fabric of diseases present in countries at a low leveI.
And other outbreaks are likely.
But the hope is the world will be beUer prepared and have learnt to pay greater attention, should Ebola, or another disease like it, strike again.
Com base no texto, assinale a alternativa correta:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2239416 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CETAP
Orgão: Pref. Tailândia-PA
Provas:
China's One Child Policy
One Child Policy in China Oesigned to Limit Population Growth
(http://geography.about.com/od/populationgeography/a/onechild.htm)
Sy Matt Rosenberg
China's one child policy was established by Chinese leader Oeng Xiaoping in 1979 to limit communist China's population growth. Although designated a "temporary measure," it continues a uarter-century after its establishment. The policy limits couples to one child. Fines, pressures to abort a pregnancy, and even forced sterilization accompanied second or subsequent pregnancies.
It is not an all-encompassing rule because it has always been restricted to ethnic Han Chinese living in urban areas.
Citizens living in rural areas and minorities living in China are not subject to the law. However, the rule has been estimated to have reduced population growth in the country of 1.3 billion by as much as 300 million people over its first twenty years.
This rule has caused a disdain for female infants; abortion, neglect, abandonment, and even infanticide have been known to occur to female infants. The result of such Oraconian family planning has resulted in the disparate ratio of 114 males for every 100 females among babies from birth through children four years of age. Normally, 105 males are naturally born for every 100 females.
Recent Effects ofthe One Child Law
Now that millions of sibling-Iess people in China are now young adults in or nearing their child-bearing years, a special provision allows millions of couples to have two children legally. If a couple is composed of two people without siblings, then they may have two children of their own, thus preventing too dramatic of a population decrease.
Although IUOs, sterilization, and abortion (legal in China) are China's most popular forms of birth control, over the past few years, China has provided more education and support for alternative birth control methods.
Statistically, China's total fertility rate (the number of births per woman) is 1.7, much higherthan slowly-declining Germanyat 1.4 but lower than the U.S. at 2.1 (2.1 births per woman is the replacement levei of fertility, representing a stable population, exclusive of migration).
In 2007, there were reports that in the southwestern Guangxi Autonomous Region of China, officials were forcing pregnant women without permission to give birth to have abortions and levying steep fines on families violating the law. As a result, riots broke out and some may have been killed, including population control officials.
The Future of China's One Child Law
Minister of the State Commission of Population and Family Planning Zhang Weiqing confirmed in early 2006 that China's one child policy is consistent with the nation's plan for population growth and would continue indefinitely. He denied rumors that the policy become less stringent to permit a second child to the general population.
Após a leitura do texto, assinale a alternativa incorreta:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2239392 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CETAP
Orgão: Pref. Tailândia-PA
Provas:
China's One Child Policy
One Child Policy in China Oesigned to Limit Population Growth
(http://geography.about.com/od/populationgeography/a/onechild.htm)
Sy Matt Rosenberg
China's one child policy was established by Chinese leader Oeng Xiaoping in 1979 to limit communist China's population growth. Although designated a "temporary measure," it continues a uarter-century after its establishment. The policy limits couples to one child. Fines, pressures to abort a pregnancy, and even forced sterilization accompanied second or subsequent pregnancies.
It is not an all-encompassing rule because it has always been restricted to ethnic Han Chinese living in urban areas.
Citizens living in rural areas and minorities living in China are not subject to the law. However, the rule has been estimated to have reduced population growth in the country of 1.3 billion by as much as 300 million people over its first twenty years.
This rule has caused a disdain for female infants; abortion, neglect, abandonment, and even infanticide have been known to occur to female infants. The result of such Oraconian family planning has resulted in the disparate ratio of 114 males for every 100 females among babies from birth through children four years of age. Normally, 105 males are naturally born for every 100 females.
Recent Effects ofthe One Child Law
Now that millions of sibling-Iess people in China are now young adults in or nearing their child-bearing years, a special provision allows millions of couples to have two children legally. If a couple is composed of two people without siblings, then they may have two children of their own, thus preventing too dramatic of a population decrease.
Although IUOs, sterilization, and abortion (legal in China) are China's most popular forms of birth control, over the past few years, China has provided more education and support for alternative birth control methods.
Statistically, China's total fertility rate (the number of births per woman) is 1.7, much higherthan slowly-declining Germanyat 1.4 but lower than the U.S. at 2.1 (2.1 births per woman is the replacement levei of fertility, representing a stable population, exclusive of migration).
In 2007, there were reports that in the southwestern Guangxi Autonomous Region of China, officials were forcing pregnant women without permission to give birth to have abortions and levying steep fines on families violating the law. As a result, riots broke out and some may have been killed, including population control officials.
The Future of China's One Child Law
Minister of the State Commission of Population and Family Planning Zhang Weiqing confirmed in early 2006 that China's one child policy is consistent with the nation's plan for population growth and would continue indefinitely. He denied rumors that the policy become less stringent to permit a second child to the general population.
Após a leitura do texto, é correto afirmar que:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2239386 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CETAP
Orgão: Pref. Tailândia-PA
Provas:
Assinale a alternativa que pode apresentar forma plural na língua inglesa:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2239377 Ano: 2015
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: CETAP
Orgão: Pref. Tailândia-PA
Provas:
A oração "People who care for the sick are the most vulnerable to the disease" apresenta estrutura que expressa:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas