Questões de Concurso
Sobre interpretação de texto | reading comprehension em inglês
Foram encontradas 9.532 questões
According to the text CB1A2-I, judge the following item.
Based on the text, it is correct to conclude that, Nasa Yuwe
is not classified as a critically endangered language because
it is spoken by more than 50,000 people.
Choose the alternative that BEST replaces the underlined word preserving the meaning of the sentence below:
“Watch or not, you will be deluged by postmortems, hot takes, tweets, TV segments and panel debates.”
Ruiz, Michelle. Vogue “Why you shouldn’t watch Trump’s Oval office address tonight,” Jan. 8th 2019.
She is at a disadvantage ____ the fact that she had never read about reading strategies before.
When the learner becomes a good reader, he/she ____ predictions and hypothesis.
Read the following statement and answer the question.
[…] We cannot simply assume that describing and exemplifying what people do with language will enable someone to learn it. If that were so, we would need to do no more than read a grammar book and a dictionary in order to learn a language. (HUTCHINSON; WATERS, 1991)
According to the ESP approach, a valid language teaching and learning process must be based on an understanding of language
Texto para as questões de 11 a 15.
Miss Heston is a perfect secretary. She knows everything, she copes with everything. She knows how to run an office. She never gets worried or irritated and she never makes mistakes. Really, she is not a woman at all, she is a machine. But she also likes to go the beach of a small fishing village, because the sea there is calm and almost motionless. She likes to fix her eyes on the horizont of the sea. She doesn’t like when there are a lot of people on the beach, so she only goes there at down.
She only goes there:
Texto para as questões de 11 a 15.
Miss Heston is a perfect secretary. She knows everything, she copes with everything. She knows how to run an office. She never gets worried or irritated and she never makes mistakes. Really, she is not a woman at all, she is a machine. But she also likes to go the beach of a small fishing village, because the sea there is calm and almost motionless. She likes to fix her eyes on the horizont of the sea. She doesn’t like when there are a lot of people on the beach, so she only goes there at down.
She likes to go to the beach of the the small fishing village at dawn because:
If you have dangerous medicines in your house, it's very important to keep them away from:
Select an alternative that fills a gap correctly:
_____________________ for their future plans for retirement will face serious financial and retiring difficulties.
TEXT III- Text for questions 34 and 35.
(Available at: https://br.pinterest.com/pin/56506170312404719/ Accessed on March 29th, 2019).
In the cartoon, the student's question reveals
According to the previous text, judge the following item.
Vertical farms enable saplings to grow 40 to 50 millimeters
in much less than half the time they would need to grow that
same length in the wild.
Plurilingualism and translanguaging: commonalities and divergences
Both plurilingual and translanguaging pedagogical practices in the education of language minoritized students remain controversial, for schools have a monolingual and monoglossic tradition that is hard to disrupt, even when the disrupting stance brings success to learners. At issue is the national identity that schools are supposed to develop in their students, and the Eurocentric system of knowledge, circulated through standardized named languages, that continues to impose what Quijano (2000) has called a coloniality of power.
All theories emerge from a place, an experience, a time, and a position, and in this case, plurilingualism and translanguaging have developed, as we have seen, from different loci of enunciation. But concepts do not remain static in a time and place, as educators and researchers take them up, as they travel, and as educators develop alternative practices. Thus, plurilingual and translanguaging pedagogical practices sometimes look the same, and sometimes they even have the same practical goals. For example, educators who say they use plurilingual pedagogical practices might insist on developing bilingual identities, and not solely use plurilingualism as a scaffold. And educators who claim to use translanguaging pedagogical practices sometimes use them only as a scaffold to the dominant language, not grasping its potential. In the United States, translanguaging pedagogies are often used in English-as-a-Second Language programs only as a scaffold. And although the potential for translanguaging is more likely to be found in bilingual education programs, this is also at times elusive. The potential is curtailed, for example, by the strict language allocation policies that have accompanied the growth of dual language education programs in the last decade in the USA, which come close to the neoliberal understanding of multilingualism espoused in the European Union.
It is important to keep the conceptual distinctions between plurilingualism and translanguaging at the forefront as we develop ways of enacting them in practice, even when pedagogies may turn out to look the same. Because the theoretical stance of translanguaging brings forth and affirms dynamic multilingual realities, it offers the potential to transform minoritized communities sense of self that the concept of plurilingualism may not always do. The purpose of translanguaging could be transformative of socio-political and socio-educational structures that legitimize the language hierarchies that exclude minoritized bilingual students and the epistemological understandings that render them invisible. In its theoretical formulation, translanguaging disrupts the concept of named languages and the power hierarchies in which languages are positioned. But the issue for the future is whether school authorities will allow translanguaging to achieve its potential, or whether it will silence it as simply another kind of scaffold. To the degree that educators act on translanguaging with political intent, it will continue to crack some openings and to open opportunities for bilingual students. Otherwise, the present conceptual differences between plurilingualism and translanguaging will be erased.
Source: GARCÍA, Ofelia; OTHEGUY, Ricardo. Plurilingualism and translanguaging: Commonalities and divergences. International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, v. 23, n. 1, p. 17-35, 2020.
Garcia e Otheguy (2020)
Considering the excerpt "All theories emerge from a place, an experience, a time, and a position, and in this case, plurilingualism and translanguaging have developed, as we have seen, from different loci of enunciation.", analyze the statements below:
I.According to the text, plurilingualism and translanguaging have things in common but also have controversies.
II.If you had to turn this excerpt into reported speech "plurilingualism and translanguaging have developed from different loci of enunciation" you would have the following result: "García and Otherguy said that plurilingualism and translanguaging had have developed from different loci of enunciation".
III.The second sillable of the word 'loci' can be pronounced as 'sa?', but also can be pronounced as 'ka?'.
It is correct what is state in:
Text CG1A2-II
The enormity of the global climate crisis is so vast that individual actions may seem meaningless: can installing LED lighting in my home or keeping my car tires inflated really help save the polar bears?
First coined by Portland, Oregon-based writer Emma Pattee, the climate shadow aims to paint a picture of the full sum of one’s choices — and the impact they have on the planet.
In an article she wrote in 2021, Pattee detailed her concept for measuring an individual’s impact: “Your climate shadow is a dark shape stretching out behind you. Everywhere you go, it goes too, tallying not just your air conditioning use and the gas mileage of your car, but also how you vote, how many children you choose to have, where you work, how you invest your money, how much you talk about climate change, and whether your words amplify urgency, apathy, or denial.” The larger the shadow — the greater an individual’s impact on doing good for the planet.
In other words, rather than incentivizing purely individual actions, your climate shadow grows when those actions inspire others, knowingly or otherwise.
Kieran Mulvaney. Climate shadow is what really matters.
National Geographic (adapted).
I In the fragment “when those actions inspire others”, the word “others” means other people.
II The excerpt “how you invest your money” could be correctly rewritten, in the passive voice, as how your money is invested.
III Emma Pattee has painted a picture of the full sum of one’s choices.
IV Based on the text, it is correct to affirm that Emma Pattee lives in Portland.
Choose the correct option.