Questões de Concurso Sobre inglês

Foram encontradas 17.677 questões

Q49192 Inglês
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Based on the text, judge the items from 29 through 38.
Distance and time can be advisably measured by the same process.
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Q49191 Inglês
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Based on the text, judge the items from 29 through 38.
Flat pieces of wood must have a proper way of their own to be measured.
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Q49190 Inglês
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Based on the text, judge the items from 29 through 38.
Never before has metrology been so firmly settled in our society that it is not likely to change its present status.
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Q49189 Inglês
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Based on the text, judge the items from 29 through 38.
Metrology drew analogies with parts of the human body to build up a measuring device.
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Q49188 Inglês
Imagem 003.jpg
Based on the text, judge the items from 29 through 38.
Metrology can now be considered an underrated issue in relation to the industrialized world.
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Q49187 Inglês
Imagem 003.jpg
Based on the text, judge the items from 29 through 38.
In developing countries, technical regulations are yet to comply not only with compulsory internal requirements, but also with international level of quality.
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Q49186 Inglês
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Based on the text, judge the items from 29 through 38.
Globalization and trade have been facing problems due to market demands on developing countries.
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Q49185 Inglês
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Based on the text, judge the items from 29 through 38.
Developed countries face globalization as a chance to increase their industrial base.
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Q47391 Inglês
From the fragment "But the software can only supplement human judgement - because people don't always mean what they say." (lines 66-68), we may infer that the author
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Q47390 Inglês
Check the alternative in which the expression is precisely explained, according to its meaning in the text.
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Q47389 Inglês
In the example given in paragraphs 5 and 6 (lines 39-63), the author explains that the
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Q47388 Inglês
The only fragment in which 'it' refers to "software" is
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Q47387 Inglês
Mark the alternative that contains an expression that is a correct replacement for the boldfaced item(s).
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Q47386 Inglês
Check the option that contains a correct correspondence of meaning.
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Q47385 Inglês
"holiday hell" and "abuse helpline" (lines 36-37) are quoted in the text to illustrate cases in which the computers will
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Q47384 Inglês
Which of the following statements is NOT true about how the software processes emotional analysis?
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Q47383 Inglês
According to the text, the software developed by Pulman and Moilanen
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Q47382 Inglês
The best title for this text is
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Q46919 Inglês
Sharks in the water

In the last year, Somalia's pirates have attacked 120 vessels in the Gulf of Aden, choking commerce in a critical shipping lane (the transit route for 20 percent of the world's oil), blocking aid supplies and driving up transport costs.
The last few weeks have shown how hard it will be to defeat the pirates on the high seas, which seems like the international community's approach. When British Marines tried to board a captured fishing dhow on Nov. 11, they had to go in with guns blazing and killed one possible hostage in the process. A week later, an Indian warship opened fire on what it thought was a pirate mother ship. But the target turned out to be a Thai fishing vessel. When pirates seized their most valuable prize ever on Nov. 15 - the Sirius Star supertanker holding 2 million barrels of Saudi crude - everyone kept their distance.
As this suggests, Somalia's seaborne bandits are making a mockery of all efforts to stop them. Pirates have only increased their efforts, ranging across an area bigger than the Mediterranean. The Sirius Star was taken 450 nautical miles southeast of Kenya, and with it, the Somalis now hold 300 hostages and 15 ships.
The Somalia's internationally recognized transitional government has invited foreign navies to do what's necessary to stop the pirates, even attacking them ashore if need be. The Security Council has affirmed that option. Moreover, nearly all of Somalia's pirates come from one region (Puntland), live in a single town (Boosaaso) and stash captured vessels in one of three ports (Eyl, Hobyo or Haradhere) - making interdiction that much easier. Andrew Linington of Nautilus UK, a seaman's union that has had many of its members taken hostage, says the international community "knows where the pirates are, they know the ports they use, they know the mother ships. Stopping them could be done," he says. But that would be expensive at a time when U.S. resources are tied up in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Rod Nordlant. Sharks in the water. Internet: (adapted).

According to the text, it is correct to affirm that

Judge the following items according to the text.

All of Somalia's pirates come from one region, what makes their interdiction quite easy.
Alternativas
Q46918 Inglês
Sharks in the water

In the last year, Somalia's pirates have attacked 120 vessels in the Gulf of Aden, choking commerce in a critical shipping lane (the transit route for 20 percent of the world's oil), blocking aid supplies and driving up transport costs.
The last few weeks have shown how hard it will be to defeat the pirates on the high seas, which seems like the international community's approach. When British Marines tried to board a captured fishing dhow on Nov. 11, they had to go in with guns blazing and killed one possible hostage in the process. A week later, an Indian warship opened fire on what it thought was a pirate mother ship. But the target turned out to be a Thai fishing vessel. When pirates seized their most valuable prize ever on Nov. 15 - the Sirius Star supertanker holding 2 million barrels of Saudi crude - everyone kept their distance.
As this suggests, Somalia's seaborne bandits are making a mockery of all efforts to stop them. Pirates have only increased their efforts, ranging across an area bigger than the Mediterranean. The Sirius Star was taken 450 nautical miles southeast of Kenya, and with it, the Somalis now hold 300 hostages and 15 ships.
The Somalia's internationally recognized transitional government has invited foreign navies to do what's necessary to stop the pirates, even attacking them ashore if need be. The Security Council has affirmed that option. Moreover, nearly all of Somalia's pirates come from one region (Puntland), live in a single town (Boosaaso) and stash captured vessels in one of three ports (Eyl, Hobyo or Haradhere) - making interdiction that much easier. Andrew Linington of Nautilus UK, a seaman's union that has had many of its members taken hostage, says the international community "knows where the pirates are, they know the ports they use, they know the mother ships. Stopping them could be done," he says. But that would be expensive at a time when U.S. resources are tied up in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Rod Nordlant. Sharks in the water. Internet: (adapted).

According to the text, it is correct to affirm that

Judge the following items according to the text.

Although the international community may know where the pirates are or the ports they use, interdicting them would be quite expensive for the U.S. at this moment.
Alternativas
Respostas
16761: E
16762: E
16763: C
16764: C
16765: E
16766: C
16767: C
16768: E
16769: A
16770: D
16771: C
16772: E
16773: D
16774: B
16775: D
16776: B
16777: E
16778: C
16779: E
16780: C