Questões de Concurso Sobre inglês
Foram encontradas 17.677 questões
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Prova:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Técnico Administrativo - Inglês |
Q162157
Inglês
Mark the sentence in which “take off” has the same meaning as in “One reason why partnerships between companies and social entrepreneurs are yet to take off could be mutual ignorance of each other.” (lines 60-62)
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Prova:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Técnico Administrativo - Inglês |
Q162156
Inglês
The boldfaced item introduce a purpose in
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Prova:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Técnico Administrativo - Inglês |
Q162155
Inglês
Which option expresses an accurate relationship between the items?
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Prova:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Técnico Administrativo - Inglês |
Q162154
Inglês
Ros Tennyson, International Business Leaders’ Forum director, believes that
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Prova:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Técnico Administrativo - Inglês |
Q162153
Inglês
Danone Grameen Foods is a good example of social business because it
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Prova:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Técnico Administrativo - Inglês |
Q162152
Inglês
According to the text, social businesses
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Prova:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Técnico Administrativo - Inglês |
Q162151
Inglês
It is NOT true that Muhammad Yunus
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Prova:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Técnico Administrativo - Inglês |
Q162150
Inglês
The main purpose of this text is to
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Engenheiro
|
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Análise de Sistemas - Suporte - Julho |
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Direito |
Q161789
Inglês
According to the last paragraph in the text, which statement is true about the IT (Information Technology) job market?
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Engenheiro
|
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Análise de Sistemas - Suporte - Julho |
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Direito |
Q161788
Inglês
Check the item where there is a correct correspondence between the boldfaced word(s) and the idea in italics.
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Engenheiro
|
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Análise de Sistemas - Suporte - Julho |
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Direito |
Q161787
Inglês
In terms of reference, it is correct to affirm that
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Engenheiro
|
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Análise de Sistemas - Suporte - Julho |
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Direito |
Q161786
Inglês
“…if you’re an aspiring teacher or health worker, you won’t be looking for jobs – the jobs will be looking for you.” (lines 57- 59) implies that
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Engenheiro
|
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Análise de Sistemas - Suporte - Julho |
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Direito |
Q161784
Inglês
Which of the following occupations are NOT seen as promising?
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Engenheiro
|
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Análise de Sistemas - Suporte - Julho |
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Direito |
Q161783
Inglês
According to Paragraph 4 (lines 30-41), why are rotation programs beneficial to the companies that implement them?
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Engenheiro
|
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Análise de Sistemas - Suporte - Julho |
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Direito |
Q161782
Inglês
In lines 20-29, Chris Dannen, the author of the text, states that the new job openings available are a result of
I - people moving into other careers or occupations;
II - the implementation of new professional positions;
III - women who leave their jobs to take care of their babies;
IV - the retirement of the workers who have reached their 60s.
The ONLY correct statement(s) is(are)
I - people moving into other careers or occupations;
II - the implementation of new professional positions;
III - women who leave their jobs to take care of their babies;
IV - the retirement of the workers who have reached their 60s.
The ONLY correct statement(s) is(are)
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Engenheiro
|
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Análise de Sistemas - Suporte - Julho |
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Direito |
Q161781
Inglês
The fragment “But wait a second: Aren’t we heading for recession?” (line 19) reveals an attitude of
Ano: 2008
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
BNDES
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Engenheiro
|
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Análise de Sistemas - Suporte - Julho |
CESGRANRIO - 2008 - BNDES - Profissional Básico - Direito |
Q161780
Inglês
The main purpose of this text is to
Ano: 2011
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
Transpetro
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Administrador Júnior
|
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Analista de Sistemas Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Contador Júnior - Contábil |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Contador Júnior - Auditoria Interna |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Economista Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Engenharia de Produção |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Médico do trabalho |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Análise de Projetos de Inverstimentos |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Geotécnica |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Elétrica |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Mecânica |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Profissional de Meio Ambiente Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Processamento |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Segurança |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Naval |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Químico de Petróleo Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Automação |
Q154636
Inglês
Texto associado
Model copes with chaos to deliver relief
Computer program helps responders transport
supplies in tough conditions
By Rachel Ehrenberg Science News, Web edition: Monday, February 21st, 2011
WASHINGTON — Getting blood or other perishable supplies to an area that’s been struck by an earthquake or hurricane isn’t as simple as asking what brown can do for you. But a new model quickly determines the best routes and means for delivering humanitarian aid, even in situations where bridges are out or airport tarmacs are clogged with planes.
The research, presented February 18 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, could help get supplies to areas which have experienced natural disasters or help prepare for efficient distribution of vaccines when the flu hits.
Efficient supply chains have long been a goal of manufacturers, but transport in fragile networks — where supply, demand and delivery routes may be in extremely rapid flux — requires a different approach, said Anna Nagurney of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who presented the new work. Rather than considering the shortest path from one place to another to maximize profit, her system aims for the cleanest path at minimum cost, while capturing factors such as the perishability of the product and the uncertainty of supply routes. ‘You don’t know where demand is, so it’s tricky,’ said Nagurney. ‘It’s a multicriteria decision-making problem.’
By calculating the total cost associated with each link in a network, accounting for congestion and incorporating penalties for time and products that are lost, the computer model calculates the best supply chain in situations where standard routes may be disrupted.
‘Mathematical tools are essential to develop formal means to predict, and to respond to, such critical perturbations,’ said Iain Couzin of Princeton University, who uses similar computational tools to study collective animal behavior. ‘This is particularly important where response must be rapid and effective, such as during disaster scenarios … or during epidemics or breaches of national security.
’ The work can be applied to immediate, pressing situations, such as getting blood, food or medication to a disaster site, or to longer-term problems such as determining the best locations for manufacturing flu vaccines. . Retrieved April 7th, 2011.
By Rachel Ehrenberg Science News, Web edition: Monday, February 21st, 2011
WASHINGTON — Getting blood or other perishable supplies to an area that’s been struck by an earthquake or hurricane isn’t as simple as asking what brown can do for you. But a new model quickly determines the best routes and means for delivering humanitarian aid, even in situations where bridges are out or airport tarmacs are clogged with planes.
The research, presented February 18 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, could help get supplies to areas which have experienced natural disasters or help prepare for efficient distribution of vaccines when the flu hits.
Efficient supply chains have long been a goal of manufacturers, but transport in fragile networks — where supply, demand and delivery routes may be in extremely rapid flux — requires a different approach, said Anna Nagurney of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who presented the new work. Rather than considering the shortest path from one place to another to maximize profit, her system aims for the cleanest path at minimum cost, while capturing factors such as the perishability of the product and the uncertainty of supply routes. ‘You don’t know where demand is, so it’s tricky,’ said Nagurney. ‘It’s a multicriteria decision-making problem.’
By calculating the total cost associated with each link in a network, accounting for congestion and incorporating penalties for time and products that are lost, the computer model calculates the best supply chain in situations where standard routes may be disrupted.
‘Mathematical tools are essential to develop formal means to predict, and to respond to, such critical perturbations,’ said Iain Couzin of Princeton University, who uses similar computational tools to study collective animal behavior. ‘This is particularly important where response must be rapid and effective, such as during disaster scenarios … or during epidemics or breaches of national security.
’ The work can be applied to immediate, pressing situations, such as getting blood, food or medication to a disaster site, or to longer-term problems such as determining the best locations for manufacturing flu vaccines. . Retrieved April 7th, 2011.
The computer model discussed in the text “…copes with chaos to deliver relief" (title) and analyzes different factors. The only factor
NOT taken in consideration in the model is the
Ano: 2011
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
Transpetro
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Administrador Júnior
|
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Analista de Sistemas Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Contador Júnior - Contábil |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Contador Júnior - Auditoria Interna |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Economista Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Engenharia de Produção |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Médico do trabalho |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Análise de Projetos de Inverstimentos |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Geotécnica |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Elétrica |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Mecânica |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Profissional de Meio Ambiente Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Processamento |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Segurança |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Naval |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Químico de Petróleo Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Automação |
Q154635
Inglês
Texto associado
Model copes with chaos to deliver relief
Computer program helps responders transport
supplies in tough conditions
By Rachel Ehrenberg Science News, Web edition: Monday, February 21st, 2011
WASHINGTON — Getting blood or other perishable supplies to an area that’s been struck by an earthquake or hurricane isn’t as simple as asking what brown can do for you. But a new model quickly determines the best routes and means for delivering humanitarian aid, even in situations where bridges are out or airport tarmacs are clogged with planes.
The research, presented February 18 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, could help get supplies to areas which have experienced natural disasters or help prepare for efficient distribution of vaccines when the flu hits.
Efficient supply chains have long been a goal of manufacturers, but transport in fragile networks — where supply, demand and delivery routes may be in extremely rapid flux — requires a different approach, said Anna Nagurney of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who presented the new work. Rather than considering the shortest path from one place to another to maximize profit, her system aims for the cleanest path at minimum cost, while capturing factors such as the perishability of the product and the uncertainty of supply routes. ‘You don’t know where demand is, so it’s tricky,’ said Nagurney. ‘It’s a multicriteria decision-making problem.’
By calculating the total cost associated with each link in a network, accounting for congestion and incorporating penalties for time and products that are lost, the computer model calculates the best supply chain in situations where standard routes may be disrupted.
‘Mathematical tools are essential to develop formal means to predict, and to respond to, such critical perturbations,’ said Iain Couzin of Princeton University, who uses similar computational tools to study collective animal behavior. ‘This is particularly important where response must be rapid and effective, such as during disaster scenarios … or during epidemics or breaches of national security.
’ The work can be applied to immediate, pressing situations, such as getting blood, food or medication to a disaster site, or to longer-term problems such as determining the best locations for manufacturing flu vaccines. . Retrieved April 7th, 2011.
By Rachel Ehrenberg Science News, Web edition: Monday, February 21st, 2011
WASHINGTON — Getting blood or other perishable supplies to an area that’s been struck by an earthquake or hurricane isn’t as simple as asking what brown can do for you. But a new model quickly determines the best routes and means for delivering humanitarian aid, even in situations where bridges are out or airport tarmacs are clogged with planes.
The research, presented February 18 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, could help get supplies to areas which have experienced natural disasters or help prepare for efficient distribution of vaccines when the flu hits.
Efficient supply chains have long been a goal of manufacturers, but transport in fragile networks — where supply, demand and delivery routes may be in extremely rapid flux — requires a different approach, said Anna Nagurney of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who presented the new work. Rather than considering the shortest path from one place to another to maximize profit, her system aims for the cleanest path at minimum cost, while capturing factors such as the perishability of the product and the uncertainty of supply routes. ‘You don’t know where demand is, so it’s tricky,’ said Nagurney. ‘It’s a multicriteria decision-making problem.’
By calculating the total cost associated with each link in a network, accounting for congestion and incorporating penalties for time and products that are lost, the computer model calculates the best supply chain in situations where standard routes may be disrupted.
‘Mathematical tools are essential to develop formal means to predict, and to respond to, such critical perturbations,’ said Iain Couzin of Princeton University, who uses similar computational tools to study collective animal behavior. ‘This is particularly important where response must be rapid and effective, such as during disaster scenarios … or during epidemics or breaches of national security.
’ The work can be applied to immediate, pressing situations, such as getting blood, food or medication to a disaster site, or to longer-term problems such as determining the best locations for manufacturing flu vaccines. . Retrieved April 7th, 2011.
In “The work can be applied to immediate, pressing situations," (lines 41-42), the fragment “can be applied" is replaced, without change in meaning, by
Ano: 2011
Banca:
CESGRANRIO
Órgão:
Transpetro
Provas:
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Administrador Júnior
|
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Analista de Sistemas Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Contador Júnior - Contábil |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Contador Júnior - Auditoria Interna |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Economista Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Engenharia de Produção |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Médico do trabalho |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Análise de Projetos de Inverstimentos |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Geotécnica |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Elétrica |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Mecânica |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Profissional de Meio Ambiente Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Processamento |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Segurança |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Naval |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Químico de Petróleo Júnior |
CESGRANRIO - 2011 - Transpetro - Engenheiro Júnior - Automação |
Q154634
Inglês
Texto associado
Model copes with chaos to deliver relief
Computer program helps responders transport
supplies in tough conditions
By Rachel Ehrenberg Science News, Web edition: Monday, February 21st, 2011
WASHINGTON — Getting blood or other perishable supplies to an area that’s been struck by an earthquake or hurricane isn’t as simple as asking what brown can do for you. But a new model quickly determines the best routes and means for delivering humanitarian aid, even in situations where bridges are out or airport tarmacs are clogged with planes.
The research, presented February 18 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, could help get supplies to areas which have experienced natural disasters or help prepare for efficient distribution of vaccines when the flu hits.
Efficient supply chains have long been a goal of manufacturers, but transport in fragile networks — where supply, demand and delivery routes may be in extremely rapid flux — requires a different approach, said Anna Nagurney of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who presented the new work. Rather than considering the shortest path from one place to another to maximize profit, her system aims for the cleanest path at minimum cost, while capturing factors such as the perishability of the product and the uncertainty of supply routes. ‘You don’t know where demand is, so it’s tricky,’ said Nagurney. ‘It’s a multicriteria decision-making problem.’
By calculating the total cost associated with each link in a network, accounting for congestion and incorporating penalties for time and products that are lost, the computer model calculates the best supply chain in situations where standard routes may be disrupted.
‘Mathematical tools are essential to develop formal means to predict, and to respond to, such critical perturbations,’ said Iain Couzin of Princeton University, who uses similar computational tools to study collective animal behavior. ‘This is particularly important where response must be rapid and effective, such as during disaster scenarios … or during epidemics or breaches of national security.
’ The work can be applied to immediate, pressing situations, such as getting blood, food or medication to a disaster site, or to longer-term problems such as determining the best locations for manufacturing flu vaccines. . Retrieved April 7th, 2011.
By Rachel Ehrenberg Science News, Web edition: Monday, February 21st, 2011
WASHINGTON — Getting blood or other perishable supplies to an area that’s been struck by an earthquake or hurricane isn’t as simple as asking what brown can do for you. But a new model quickly determines the best routes and means for delivering humanitarian aid, even in situations where bridges are out or airport tarmacs are clogged with planes.
The research, presented February 18 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, could help get supplies to areas which have experienced natural disasters or help prepare for efficient distribution of vaccines when the flu hits.
Efficient supply chains have long been a goal of manufacturers, but transport in fragile networks — where supply, demand and delivery routes may be in extremely rapid flux — requires a different approach, said Anna Nagurney of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who presented the new work. Rather than considering the shortest path from one place to another to maximize profit, her system aims for the cleanest path at minimum cost, while capturing factors such as the perishability of the product and the uncertainty of supply routes. ‘You don’t know where demand is, so it’s tricky,’ said Nagurney. ‘It’s a multicriteria decision-making problem.’
By calculating the total cost associated with each link in a network, accounting for congestion and incorporating penalties for time and products that are lost, the computer model calculates the best supply chain in situations where standard routes may be disrupted.
‘Mathematical tools are essential to develop formal means to predict, and to respond to, such critical perturbations,’ said Iain Couzin of Princeton University, who uses similar computational tools to study collective animal behavior. ‘This is particularly important where response must be rapid and effective, such as during disaster scenarios … or during epidemics or breaches of national security.
’ The work can be applied to immediate, pressing situations, such as getting blood, food or medication to a disaster site, or to longer-term problems such as determining the best locations for manufacturing flu vaccines. . Retrieved April 7th, 2011.
Based on the meanings in the text, the two items are antonymous in