Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 45.244 questões.

3125258 Ano: 2023
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UNEB
Orgão: CBM-BA
Provas:

Enunciado 3484440-1

Disponível em: <https://quotesgram.com/quotes-funny-horse-cartoon/>. Acesso em: 29 nov. 2022.

According to the cartoon, you can infer that

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3125257 Ano: 2023
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UNEB
Orgão: CBM-BA
Provas:

Colombia Allows Congress Members To Get Pets To Work, Senator Brings Horse

Alirio Barrera first rode through the capital Bogota before steering his steed into the halls of Congress, to make a statement about the importance of horses for the Colombian countryside.

World NewsAgence France-PresseUpdated: September 29, 2022 7:19 am IST

Enunciado 3484439-1

Colombia: Members of Colombia's Congress can now bring their pets to work, in a world first, and for one senator, wild horses couldn't have dragged him away from marking the first day of the new rule.

Alirio Barrera showed up to work astride his white horse.

He first rode through the capital Bogota before steering his steed into the halls of Congress, to make a statement about the importance of horses for the Colombian countryside.

"lt is a tribute to the farmers, to the men and women, to the herdsmen who live with horses. To all those people who work in the fields," he told AFP, holding his horse - named Pasaporte - by the bridle.

Senate president Roy Barreras announced the new policy last week, with his dog lounging in his lap. This makes the Colombian Congress "the first in the world to be pet-friendly," he said.

For Barrera, "my pet is my horse." "lf the law is for one, let it be for all."

But his ride to work rubbed some colleagues the wrong way. Senator Andrea Padilla criticized what she called "an immature attitude with which he wanted to ridicule a good decision."

Disponível em: <https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/colombia-allows-congress-members-to-get-pets-to-work-senator-brings-horse-3387192>. Acesso em: 24 nov. 2022.

The text let us know that

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3125256 Ano: 2023
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UNEB
Orgão: CBM-BA
Provas:

Colombia Allows Congress Members To Get Pets To Work, Senator Brings Horse

Alirio Barrera first rode through the capital Bogota before steering his steed into the halls of Congress, to make a statement about the importance of horses for the Colombian countryside.

World NewsAgence France-PresseUpdated: September 29, 2022 7:19 am IST

Enunciado 3484438-1

Colombia: Members of Colombia's Congress can now bring their pets to work, in a world first, and for one senator, wild horses couldn't have dragged him away from marking the first day of the new rule.

Alirio Barrera showed up to work astride his white horse.

He first rode through the capital Bogota before steering his steed into the halls of Congress, to make a statement about the importance of horses for the Colombian countryside.

"lt is a tribute to the farmers, to the men and women, to the herdsmen who live with horses. To all those people who work in the fields," he told AFP, holding his horse - named Pasaporte - by the bridle.

Senate president Roy Barreras announced the new policy last week, with his dog lounging in his lap. This makes the Colombian Congress "the first in the world to be pet-friendly," he said.

For Barrera, "my pet is my horse." "lf the law is for one, let it be for all."

But his ride to work rubbed some colleagues the wrong way. Senator Andrea Padilla criticized what she called "an immature attitude with which he wanted to ridicule a good decision."

Disponível em: <https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/colombia-allows-congress-members-to-get-pets-to-work-senator-brings-horse-3387192>. Acesso em: 24 nov. 2022.

According to the text, it is correct to say that

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3125255 Ano: 2023
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UNEB
Orgão: CBM-BA
Provas:

'Good boy!': How police dogs are trained to sniff out drugs, explosives or find missing people

Police K-9 dogs help officers at the frontline, and have been involved in about 100 successful cases annually over the past three years. Get a glimpse into what the training process is like for these dogs.

Play Video

02:00 Min

Police K-9 dogs help officers at the frontline, and have been involved in about 100 successful cases annually over the past three years. Neo Rong Wei takes a look at how they are trained.

Cheryl Lin

27 Mar 2022 06:00PM (Updated: 27 Mar 2022 11:53PM)

SINGAPORE: Scampering alonga luggage conveyor belt, two-year-old narcotics detection dog Inca is hard at work, sniffing bag after bag.

Abruptly, the labrador retriever freezes -with his snout hovering right above a red suitcase.

lt's a signal to his trainer: They've found what they're looking for. lnside the bag is a small 30g pack of drugs, wrapped in layers of plastic.

His handler, Sergeant Aloysius Ho, responds with praise: "Goooood boy!" He also brandishes a yellow rubber bali - lnca's reward for a job well done.

The dog wastes no time, chewing excitedly on his bounty before starting up a game of fetch with his handler.

lt's an example of the positive reinforcement the Police K-9 unit uses to train their dogs, rewarding them with the bali for desired behaviors.

"The reward will make the dogs more likely to repeat such behaviors that will help its handlers achieve the mission," said the police.

Besides training pups like Inca to sniff out narcotics, the Police K-9 unit - which has about 240 working dogs - also trains them to find explosives , track suspects or missing persons, or help with patrols and security coverage.

The unit has had about 100 successful cases every year over the past three years, the police said.

Dash, a five-year-old black labrador retriever, was the star of one such case.

ln October 2020, the police were alerted after a man was found unresponsive in a car along Bukit Timah Road.

Dash detected something below the driver's seat and arm rest area.

This helped uncover 31 bags of a "brownish powdery substance" and a bag of a "crystallized substance", all believed to be controlled drugs, the police said.

At a media visit to the K-9 center in Choa Chu Kang, Dash makes another appearance - this time, identifying someone carrying drugs from a row of four people.

A large fan blows from behind them , amplifying their scent. This set up is similar to ones used at Woodlands and Tuas Checkpoints.

Soon, she homes in on a suspect, pounces against a metal grille separating them to get a deeper whiff, and then starts gnawing at it.

She has found the person carrying the drugs - drawing praise and pats from her handler, Sergeant Choi Jia Wen.

ln another training room, Koby, an energetic two-yearold English springer spaniel, is looking for explosives. Slightly nervous, the dog needs some coaxing from his handler, Station lnspector See Toh Wai Leng.

After zipping between stacks of crates, he stops at a red box on a low shelf. Staring at it dead-on, he taps his front paws repeatedly, as if to signal: "Here!"

To get to this stage, officers must undergo at least 12 weeks of training to become proficient in the basics of handling a workíng dog . The dogs too undergo 12 weeks of training before they are ready for deployment.

The training process is criticai, said Supenntendent of Police Tan Khoon Seng, who is the unit's operations officer.

"(lt) is incredibly important because it strengthens the bond between the handler and the dog under his or her charge. This, in turn , translates to higher operational effectiveness at the frontline."

Once in deployment, the dogs are trained for about 15 minutes to an hour per day.

Disponível em. <https.//www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/police-dogs-k9-unit-training-drugs-explosives-2583391>. Acesso em: 24 nov. 2022.

She has found the person carrying the drugs - drawing praise and pats from her handler, Sergeant Choi Jia Wen.

Analysing lhe sentence, you can affirm that

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3125254 Ano: 2023
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UNEB
Orgão: CBM-BA
Provas:

'Good boy!': How police dogs are trained to sniff out drugs, explosives or find missing people

Police K-9 dogs help officers at the frontline, and have been involved in about 100 successful cases annually over the past three years. Get a glimpse into what the training process is like for these dogs.

Play Video

02:00 Min

Police K-9 dogs help officers at the frontline, and have been involved in about 100 successful cases annually over the past three years. Neo Rong Wei takes a look at how they are trained.

Cheryl Lin

27 Mar 2022 06:00PM (Updated: 27 Mar 2022 11:53PM)

SINGAPORE: Scampering alonga luggage conveyor belt, two-year-old narcotics detection dog Inca is hard at work, sniffing bag after bag.

Abruptly, the labrador retriever freezes -with his snout hovering right above a red suitcase.

lt's a signal to his trainer: They've found what they're looking for. lnside the bag is a small 30g pack of drugs, wrapped in layers of plastic.

His handler, Sergeant Aloysius Ho, responds with praise: "Goooood boy!" He also brandishes a yellow rubber bali - lnca's reward for a job well done.

The dog wastes no time, chewing excitedly on his bounty before starting up a game of fetch with his handler.

lt's an example of the positive reinforcement the Police K-9 unit uses to train their dogs, rewarding them with the bali for desired behaviors.

"The reward will make the dogs more likely to repeat such behaviors that will help its handlers achieve the mission," said the police.

Besides training pups like Inca to sniff out narcotics, the Police K-9 unit - which has about 240 working dogs - also trains them to find explosives , track suspects or missing persons, or help with patrols and security coverage.

The unit has had about 100 successful cases every year over the past three years, the police said.

Dash, a five-year-old black labrador retriever, was the star of one such case.

ln October 2020, the police were alerted after a man was found unresponsive in a car along Bukit Timah Road.

Dash detected something below the driver's seat and arm rest area.

This helped uncover 31 bags of a "brownish powdery substance" and a bag of a "crystallized substance", all believed to be controlled drugs, the police said.

At a media visit to the K-9 center in Choa Chu Kang, Dash makes another appearance - this time, identifying someone carrying drugs from a row of four people.

A large fan blows from behind them , amplifying their scent. This set up is similar to ones used at Woodlands and Tuas Checkpoints.

Soon, she homes in on a suspect, pounces against a metal grille separating them to get a deeper whiff, and then starts gnawing at it.

She has found the person carrying the drugs - drawing praise and pats from her handler, Sergeant Choi Jia Wen.

ln another training room, Koby, an energetic two-yearold English springer spaniel, is looking for explosives. Slightly nervous, the dog needs some coaxing from his handler, Station lnspector See Toh Wai Leng.

After zipping between stacks of crates, he stops at a red box on a low shelf. Staring at it dead-on, he taps his front paws repeatedly, as if to signal: "Here!"

To get to this stage, officers must undergo at least 12 weeks of training to become proficient in the basics of handling a workíng dog . The dogs too undergo 12 weeks of training before they are ready for deployment.

The training process is criticai, said Supenntendent of Police Tan Khoon Seng, who is the unit's operations officer.

"(lt) is incredibly important because it strengthens the bond between the handler and the dog under his or her charge. This, in turn , translates to higher operational effectiveness at the frontline."

Once in deployment, the dogs are trained for about 15 minutes to an hour per day.

Disponível em. <https.//www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/police-dogs-k9-unit-training-drugs-explosives-2583391>. Acesso em: 24 nov. 2022.

After zipping between stacks of crates, he stops ata red box on a low shelf. Staring at it dead-on, he taps his front paws repeatedly, as if to signal: "Here!"

About the sentence below, it is true to say that

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3125253 Ano: 2023
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UNEB
Orgão: CBM-BA
Provas:

'Good boy!': How police dogs are trained to sniff out drugs, explosives or find missing people

Police K-9 dogs help officers at the frontline, and have been involved in about 100 successful cases annually over the past three years. Get a glimpse into what the training process is like for these dogs.

Play Video

02:00 Min

Police K-9 dogs help officers at the frontline, and have been involved in about 100 successful cases annually over the past three years. Neo Rong Wei takes a look at how they are trained.

Cheryl Lin

27 Mar 2022 06:00PM (Updated: 27 Mar 2022 11:53PM)

SINGAPORE: Scampering alonga luggage conveyor belt, two-year-old narcotics detection dog Inca is hard at work, sniffing bag after bag.

Abruptly, the labrador retriever freezes -with his snout hovering right above a red suitcase.

lt's a signal to his trainer: They've found what they're looking for. lnside the bag is a small 30g pack of drugs, wrapped in layers of plastic.

His handler, Sergeant Aloysius Ho, responds with praise: "Goooood boy!" He also brandishes a yellow rubber bali - lnca's reward for a job well done.

The dog wastes no time, chewing excitedly on his bounty before starting up a game of fetch with his handler.

lt's an example of the positive reinforcement the Police K-9 unit uses to train their dogs, rewarding them with the bali for desired behaviors.

"The reward will make the dogs more likely to repeat such behaviors that will help its handlers achieve the mission," said the police.

Besides training pups like Inca to sniff out narcotics, the Police K-9 unit - which has about 240 working dogs - also trains them to find explosives , track suspects or missing persons, or help with patrols and security coverage.

The unit has had about 100 successful cases every year over the past three years, the police said.

Dash, a five-year-old black labrador retriever, was the star of one such case.

ln October 2020, the police were alerted after a man was found unresponsive in a car along Bukit Timah Road.

Dash detected something below the driver's seat and arm rest area.

This helped uncover 31 bags of a "brownish powdery substance" and a bag of a "crystallized substance", all believed to be controlled drugs, the police said.

At a media visit to the K-9 center in Choa Chu Kang, Dash makes another appearance - this time, identifying someone carrying drugs from a row of four people.

A large fan blows from behind them , amplifying their scent. This set up is similar to ones used at Woodlands and Tuas Checkpoints.

Soon, she homes in on a suspect, pounces against a metal grille separating them to get a deeper whiff, and then starts gnawing at it.

She has found the person carrying the drugs - drawing praise and pats from her handler, Sergeant Choi Jia Wen.

ln another training room, Koby, an energetic two-yearold English springer spaniel, is looking for explosives. Slightly nervous, the dog needs some coaxing from his handler, Station lnspector See Toh Wai Leng.

After zipping between stacks of crates, he stops at a red box on a low shelf. Staring at it dead-on, he taps his front paws repeatedly, as if to signal: "Here!"

To get to this stage, officers must undergo at least 12 weeks of training to become proficient in the basics of handling a workíng dog . The dogs too undergo 12 weeks of training before they are ready for deployment.

The training process is criticai, said Supenntendent of Police Tan Khoon Seng, who is the unit's operations officer.

"(lt) is incredibly important because it strengthens the bond between the handler and the dog under his or her charge. This, in turn , translates to higher operational effectiveness at the frontline."

Once in deployment, the dogs are trained for about 15 minutes to an hour per day.

Disponível em. <https.//www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/police-dogs-k9-unit-training-drugs-explosives-2583391>. Acesso em: 24 nov. 2022.

Based on the text, it is correct to state that

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3125252 Ano: 2023
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UNEB
Orgão: CBM-BA
Provas:

'Good boy!': How police dogs are trained to sniff out drugs, explosives or find missing people

Police K-9 dogs help officers at the frontline, and have been involved in about 100 successful cases annually over the past three years. Get a glimpse into what the training process is like for these dogs.

Play Video

02:00 Min

Police K-9 dogs help officers at the frontline, and have been involved in about 100 successful cases annually over the past three years. Neo Rong Wei takes a look at how they are trained.

Cheryl Lin

27 Mar 2022 06:00PM (Updated: 27 Mar 2022 11:53PM)

SINGAPORE: Scampering alonga luggage conveyor belt, two-year-old narcotics detection dog Inca is hard at work, sniffing bag after bag.

Abruptly, the labrador retriever freezes -with his snout hovering right above a red suitcase.

lt's a signal to his trainer: They've found what they're looking for. lnside the bag is a small 30g pack of drugs, wrapped in layers of plastic.

His handler, Sergeant Aloysius Ho, responds with praise: "Goooood boy!" He also brandishes a yellow rubber bali - lnca's reward for a job well done.

The dog wastes no time, chewing excitedly on his bounty before starting up a game of fetch with his handler.

lt's an example of the positive reinforcement the Police K-9 unit uses to train their dogs, rewarding them with the bali for desired behaviors.

"The reward will make the dogs more likely to repeat such behaviors that will help its handlers achieve the mission," said the police.

Besides training pups like Inca to sniff out narcotics, the Police K-9 unit - which has about 240 working dogs - also trains them to find explosives , track suspects or missing persons, or help with patrols and security coverage.

The unit has had about 100 successful cases every year over the past three years, the police said.

Dash, a five-year-old black labrador retriever, was the star of one such case.

ln October 2020, the police were alerted after a man was found unresponsive in a car along Bukit Timah Road.

Dash detected something below the driver's seat and arm rest area.

This helped uncover 31 bags of a "brownish powdery substance" and a bag of a "crystallized substance", all believed to be controlled drugs, the police said.

At a media visit to the K-9 center in Choa Chu Kang, Dash makes another appearance - this time, identifying someone carrying drugs from a row of four people.

A large fan blows from behind them , amplifying their scent. This set up is similar to ones used at Woodlands and Tuas Checkpoints.

Soon, she homes in on a suspect, pounces against a metal grille separating them to get a deeper whiff, and then starts gnawing at it.

She has found the person carrying the drugs - drawing praise and pats from her handler, Sergeant Choi Jia Wen.

ln another training room, Koby, an energetic two-yearold English springer spaniel, is looking for explosives. Slightly nervous, the dog needs some coaxing from his handler, Station lnspector See Toh Wai Leng.

After zipping between stacks of crates, he stops at a red box on a low shelf. Staring at it dead-on, he taps his front paws repeatedly, as if to signal: "Here!"

To get to this stage, officers must undergo at least 12 weeks of training to become proficient in the basics of handling a workíng dog . The dogs too undergo 12 weeks of training before they are ready for deployment.

The training process is criticai, said Supenntendent of Police Tan Khoon Seng, who is the unit's operations officer.

"(lt) is incredibly important because it strengthens the bond between the handler and the dog under his or her charge. This, in turn , translates to higher operational effectiveness at the frontline."

Once in deployment, the dogs are trained for about 15 minutes to an hour per day.

Disponível em. <https.//www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/police-dogs-k9-unit-training-drugs-explosives-2583391>. Acesso em: 24 nov. 2022.

According to lhe text, it is correct to say that

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3123814 Ano: 2023
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. Novo Cabrais-RS
Provas:

Sorry for the delayed response

01 Have (1) e-mail you’ve been meaning (but not really) to reply to? Read below for some

02 reasons why your response has been delayed:

03 • I totally meant to respond to this earlier, but I didn’t know (2) answer to your question

04 and I kept not caring enough to ask anyone. Now (3) weird amount of time has passed,

05 so I’m going to loop Laura (cc’d) into this e-mail thread to see if she can handle this. Laura?

06 • Sorry for (4) delay! I put off answering your e-mail until I had (5) even more tedious

07 task that I wanted to avoid. Thanks!

08 • So sorry that I’m just getting to this now. There were six other people on this e-mail thread

09 and I was hoping that one of them would answer your question and I could just go on living

10 my life.

(Available at: https://www.instagram.com/p/CsHm2YnteFa/ – text especially adapted for this test).

Analyze the following excerpt from the text: “(...) your response has been delayed” (l. 02). Mark the alternative below that shows the sentence correctly rewritten in an interrogative structure and in the same verb tense.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3123813 Ano: 2023
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. Novo Cabrais-RS
Provas:

Sorry for the delayed response

01 Have (1) e-mail you’ve been meaning (but not really) to reply to? Read below for some

02 reasons why your response has been delayed:

03 • I totally meant to respond to this earlier, but I didn’t know (2) answer to your question

04 and I kept not caring enough to ask anyone. Now (3) weird amount of time has passed,

05 so I’m going to loop Laura (cc’d) into this e-mail thread to see if she can handle this. Laura?

06 • Sorry for (4) delay! I put off answering your e-mail until I had (5) even more tedious

07 task that I wanted to avoid. Thanks!

08 • So sorry that I’m just getting to this now. There were six other people on this e-mail thread

09 and I was hoping that one of them would answer your question and I could just go on living

10 my life.

(Available at: https://www.instagram.com/p/CsHm2YnteFa/ – text especially adapted for this test).

Analyze the following statements about the highlighted word “enough” (l. 04):

I. It is an adjective and can only be used with nouns.

II. It is an adverb, and it can modify adjectives and verbs.

III. It should be placed after the verb.

Which ones are correct?

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3123812 Ano: 2023
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. Novo Cabrais-RS
Provas:

Sorry for the delayed response

01 Have (1) e-mail you’ve been meaning (but not really) to reply to? Read below for some

02 reasons why your response has been delayed:

03 • I totally meant to respond to this earlier, but I didn’t know (2) answer to your question

04 and I kept not caring enough to ask anyone. Now (3) weird amount of time has passed,

05 so I’m going to loop Laura (cc’d) into this e-mail thread to see if she can handle this. Laura?

06 • Sorry for (4) delay! I put off answering your e-mail until I had (5) even more tedious

07 task that I wanted to avoid. Thanks!

08 • So sorry that I’m just getting to this now. There were six other people on this e-mail thread

09 and I was hoping that one of them would answer your question and I could just go on living

10 my life.

(Available at: https://www.instagram.com/p/CsHm2YnteFa/ – text especially adapted for this test).

Which of the alternatives below correctly and respectively completes the gaps in the text with the missing articles, in the order of 1 to 5?

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas