Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 174 questões.

1142920 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Administração Financeira e Orçamentária
Banca: UFPR
Orgão: UFPR
Provas:
Considerando a classificação legal da receita por fontes, assinale a alternativa que apresenta corretamente os itens que fazem parte das receitas tributárias.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1142919 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Administração Financeira e Orçamentária
Banca: UFPR
Orgão: UFPR
Provas:
Escolha a alternativa que apresenta corretamente os estágios da despesa.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1142918 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Administração Financeira e Orçamentária
Banca: UFPR
Orgão: UFPR
Provas:
A respeito dos princípios orçamentários, assinale a alternativa correta.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1142917 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Auditoria
Banca: UFPR
Orgão: UFPR
Provas:
A Exposição de Normas de Auditoria n.º 29 (ENA 29) estabelece que o sistema de controle interno de uma empresa se decompõe em dois grupos de controle: os de natureza contábil e os de natureza administrativa. Os controles contábeis compreendem o plano de organização e todos os sistemas, métodos e procedimentos relativos à salvaguarda dos bens, direitos e obrigações e à fidedignidade dos registros financeiros. Os controles administrativos compreendem o plano de organização, os sistemas, métodos e procedimentos pela direção, com a finalidade de contribuir para a eficiência e eficácia operacional e, também, para a obediência a diretrizes, políticas, normas e instruções da administração. Numere a coluna da direita, relacionando os exemplos com os respectivos tipos de controles internos descritos na coluna da esquerda.

enunciado 1142917-1

Assinale a alternativa que apresenta a numeração correta da coluna da direita, de cima para baixo.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1142916 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Auditoria
Banca: UFPR
Orgão: UFPR
Provas:
Considere os seguintes procedimentos de controle financeiro:

1. Manter Boletim ou outros livros de caixa para demonstrar o registro das operações do caixa.

2. Conferir se foram observadas as normas de aprovação, crédito, carregamento e faturamento da mercadoria.

3. Manter registros individuais das contas a receber, indicando número dos títulos, valores, vencimentos e saldos.

4. Verificar se os preços estão de acordo com listas de preços e se os preços diferentes estão aprovados pelo responsável competente, assegurando-se de que as notas fiscais contenham o preço correto, evitando o favorecimento inadequado de um cliente em relação a outros.

5. Manter registro de cheques emitidos e recebidos, para assegurar que os pagamentos e recebimentos sejam processados e registrados corretamente.

São procedimentos relativos aos controles internos no setor financeiro:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1142915 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UFPR
Orgão: UFPR
Provas:
William Penn (1644-1718), founder of Pennsylvania. Son of an admiral, he was sent to a Puritan school and was expelled
from Oxford as a dissenter in 1660. Sent to Ireland to manage the family estates, he regularly attended the Quaker meeting at Cork,
and on his return to England he was twice imprisoned for proselytizing, but nonetheless retained connections with the court. In
1681, Charles II repaid a debt owed to Penn's father by granting him a large province on the west bank of the Delaware river in
North America. Penn drew up a frame of government providing for religious toleration in the new colony, which he named
Pennsylvania. After he had supervised the building of Philadelphia (1682-4), he returned to England and, on James II's accession,
secured the release of some 1,200 Quaker prisoners. Out of favour after the Glorious Revolution, he returned to America in 1699,
but financial mismanagement forced him to mortgage his rights as proprietor of the colony.

(Gardiner, J., & Wenborn, N. (eds.) (1995). The History Today Companion to British History. London: Collins & Brown.)
In 1681, Penn became the owner of Pennsylvania because:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1142914 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UFPR
Orgão: UFPR
Provas:
William Penn (1644-1718), founder of Pennsylvania. Son of an admiral, he was sent to a Puritan school and was expelled
from Oxford as a dissenter in 1660. Sent to Ireland to manage the family estates, he regularly attended the Quaker meeting at Cork,
and on his return to England he was twice imprisoned for proselytizing, but nonetheless retained connections with the court. In
1681, Charles II repaid a debt owed to Penn's father by granting him a large province on the west bank of the Delaware river in
North America. Penn drew up a frame of government providing for religious toleration in the new colony, which he named
Pennsylvania. After he had supervised the building of Philadelphia (1682-4), he returned to England and, on James II's accession,
secured the release of some 1,200 Quaker prisoners. Out of favour after the Glorious Revolution, he returned to America in 1699,
but financial mismanagement forced him to mortgage his rights as proprietor of the colony.

(Gardiner, J., & Wenborn, N. (eds.) (1995). The History Today Companion to British History. London: Collins & Brown.)
Penn was imprisoned in England:
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1142913 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UFPR
Orgão: UFPR
Provas:
We are accustomed to thinking of military success as determined by quality of weaponry, rather than by food supply. But a
clear example of how improvements in food supply may decisively increase military success comes from the history of Maori New
Zealand. The Maori are the Polynesian people who were the first to settle New Zealand. Traditionally, they fought frequent fierce
wars against each other, but only against closely neighboring tribes. Those wars were limited by the modest productivity of their
agriculture, whose staple crop was sweet potatoes. It was not possible to grow enough sweet potatoes to feed an army in the field
for a long time or on distant marches. When Europeans arrived in New Zealand, they brought potatoes, which beginning around
1815 considerably increased Maori crop yields. Maori could now grow enough food to supply armies in the field for many weeks.
The result was a 15-year period in Maori history, from 1818 until 1833, when Maori tribes that had acquired potatoes and guns from
the English sent armies out on raids to attack tribes hundreds of miles away that had not yet acquired potatoes and guns. Thus, the
potato's productivity relieved previous limitations on Maori warfare, similar to the limitations that low-productivity corn agriculture
imposed on Maya warfare.

(Diamond, J. (2006). Collapse. London: Penguin.)
Why does the text mention the Maya?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1142912 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UFPR
Orgão: UFPR
Provas:
We are accustomed to thinking of military success as determined by quality of weaponry, rather than by food supply. But a
clear example of how improvements in food supply may decisively increase military success comes from the history of Maori New
Zealand. The Maori are the Polynesian people who were the first to settle New Zealand. Traditionally, they fought frequent fierce
wars against each other, but only against closely neighboring tribes. Those wars were limited by the modest productivity of their
agriculture, whose staple crop was sweet potatoes. It was not possible to grow enough sweet potatoes to feed an army in the field
for a long time or on distant marches. When Europeans arrived in New Zealand, they brought potatoes, which beginning around
1815 considerably increased Maori crop yields. Maori could now grow enough food to supply armies in the field for many weeks.
The result was a 15-year period in Maori history, from 1818 until 1833, when Maori tribes that had acquired potatoes and guns from
the English sent armies out on raids to attack tribes hundreds of miles away that had not yet acquired potatoes and guns. Thus, the
potato's productivity relieved previous limitations on Maori warfare, similar to the limitations that low-productivity corn agriculture
imposed on Maya warfare.

(Diamond, J. (2006). Collapse. London: Penguin.)
Which of the following sentences is NOT true, according to the text?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
1142911 Ano: 2010
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UFPR
Orgão: UFPR
Provas:
We are accustomed to thinking of military success as determined by quality of weaponry, rather than by food supply. But a
clear example of how improvements in food supply may decisively increase military success comes from the history of Maori New
Zealand. The Maori are the Polynesian people who were the first to settle New Zealand. Traditionally, they fought frequent fierce
wars against each other, but only against closely neighboring tribes. Those wars were limited by the modest productivity of their
agriculture, whose staple crop was sweet potatoes. It was not possible to grow enough sweet potatoes to feed an army in the field
for a long time or on distant marches. When Europeans arrived in New Zealand, they brought potatoes, which beginning around
1815 considerably increased Maori crop yields. Maori could now grow enough food to supply armies in the field for many weeks.
The result was a 15-year period in Maori history, from 1818 until 1833, when Maori tribes that had acquired potatoes and guns from
the English sent armies out on raids to attack tribes hundreds of miles away that had not yet acquired potatoes and guns. Thus, the
potato's productivity relieved previous limitations on Maori warfare, similar to the limitations that low-productivity corn agriculture
imposed on Maya warfare.

(Diamond, J. (2006). Collapse. London: Penguin.)
How did the arrival of Europeans change Maori warfare?
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas