Questões de Concurso Para professor - inglês

Foram encontradas 18.316 questões

Resolva questões gratuitamente!

Junte-se a mais de 4 milhões de concurseiros!

Q2934953 Inglês

He is the farmer __we talked about last night.

Alternativas
Q2934952 Inglês

My boss smokes____ a chimney.

Alternativas
Q2934950 Inglês

____ he had time, he didn’t want to do it.

Alternativas
Q2934948 Inglês

Use the correct conjunctions to complete the sentences.


He asked me ___ I was going on a trip.

I won’t go ____ she invites me.

She couldn’t stay longer ___ she had an appointment.

___ we have no money, we can’t buy anything.

Alternativas
Q2934947 Inglês

The man ___ the book on the table and began to write.

Alternativas
Q2934944 Inglês

Assinale a alternativa que completa apropriadamente a frase abaixo.


The mother ______ the milk for her son, and carelessly he _____ it on his chothes.

Alternativas
Q2934942 Inglês

O texto a seguir refere-se às questões 29, 30, 31 e 32.


Learning to quit


Jodi Hall started smoking at age 9.

By the time she was 16, she was up to a pack a day – and she wanted to quit. A couple of reasons: one, her health; two, a guy named Mony. “He said that when he kissed me, it was like kissing an ashtray”, Jodi says.

Earlier this year, Jodi, along with 25 of her classmates at Johnson High School, in Savannah, GA, enrolled in the school’s first stop-smoking class. During the eight-week Tobacco Free Teen class, they learned what smoking can do to their body, their wallet and their grades (some kids end up cutting class to satisfy their nicotine cravings). But it wasn’t just about scare tactics. The goal is behavior modification, not punishment, so students are taught techniques for handling stress and resisting the urge to light up even when friends or parents do.

According to the American Lung Association (ALA), which sponsors the class, about half the adults who smoke were regular smokers by age 18. “Theses numbers are only going to get worse,” says Kristine Lewis of the ALA. “The tobacco industry is turning to teens.”

How did the students do? Jodi has been cigaretteless for three months. But she’s the only one. Her classmate Adam Cushman is slowly putting his way back to three packs a day. The 16-year-old says he wants to stop, “but the way things are going, I doubt I’ll be able to.”


Seventeen, June 1996.

The word goal in “The goal is behavior modification” can be replaced by:

Alternativas
Q2934938 Inglês

O texto a seguir refere-se às questões 29, 30, 31 e 32.


Learning to quit


Jodi Hall started smoking at age 9.

By the time she was 16, she was up to a pack a day – and she wanted to quit. A couple of reasons: one, her health; two, a guy named Mony. “He said that when he kissed me, it was like kissing an ashtray”, Jodi says.

Earlier this year, Jodi, along with 25 of her classmates at Johnson High School, in Savannah, GA, enrolled in the school’s first stop-smoking class. During the eight-week Tobacco Free Teen class, they learned what smoking can do to their body, their wallet and their grades (some kids end up cutting class to satisfy their nicotine cravings). But it wasn’t just about scare tactics. The goal is behavior modification, not punishment, so students are taught techniques for handling stress and resisting the urge to light up even when friends or parents do.

According to the American Lung Association (ALA), which sponsors the class, about half the adults who smoke were regular smokers by age 18. “Theses numbers are only going to get worse,” says Kristine Lewis of the ALA. “The tobacco industry is turning to teens.”

How did the students do? Jodi has been cigaretteless for three months. But she’s the only one. Her classmate Adam Cushman is slowly putting his way back to three packs a day. The 16-year-old says he wants to stop, “but the way things are going, I doubt I’ll be able to.”


Seventeen, June 1996.

It can be inferred from the text that smoking can affect the following aspects of students’ lives:

Alternativas
Q2934936 Inglês

O texto a seguir refere-se às questões 29, 30, 31 e 32.


Learning to quit


Jodi Hall started smoking at age 9.

By the time she was 16, she was up to a pack a day – and she wanted to quit. A couple of reasons: one, her health; two, a guy named Mony. “He said that when he kissed me, it was like kissing an ashtray”, Jodi says.

Earlier this year, Jodi, along with 25 of her classmates at Johnson High School, in Savannah, GA, enrolled in the school’s first stop-smoking class. During the eight-week Tobacco Free Teen class, they learned what smoking can do to their body, their wallet and their grades (some kids end up cutting class to satisfy their nicotine cravings). But it wasn’t just about scare tactics. The goal is behavior modification, not punishment, so students are taught techniques for handling stress and resisting the urge to light up even when friends or parents do.

According to the American Lung Association (ALA), which sponsors the class, about half the adults who smoke were regular smokers by age 18. “Theses numbers are only going to get worse,” says Kristine Lewis of the ALA. “The tobacco industry is turning to teens.”

How did the students do? Jodi has been cigaretteless for three months. But she’s the only one. Her classmate Adam Cushman is slowly putting his way back to three packs a day. The 16-year-old says he wants to stop, “but the way things are going, I doubt I’ll be able to.”


Seventeen, June 1996.

O pronome they em “they learned what smoking can do to…” refere-se a Jodi e:

Alternativas
Q2934934 Inglês

O texto a seguir refere-se às questões 29, 30, 31 e 32.


Learning to quit


Jodi Hall started smoking at age 9.

By the time she was 16, she was up to a pack a day – and she wanted to quit. A couple of reasons: one, her health; two, a guy named Mony. “He said that when he kissed me, it was like kissing an ashtray”, Jodi says.

Earlier this year, Jodi, along with 25 of her classmates at Johnson High School, in Savannah, GA, enrolled in the school’s first stop-smoking class. During the eight-week Tobacco Free Teen class, they learned what smoking can do to their body, their wallet and their grades (some kids end up cutting class to satisfy their nicotine cravings). But it wasn’t just about scare tactics. The goal is behavior modification, not punishment, so students are taught techniques for handling stress and resisting the urge to light up even when friends or parents do.

According to the American Lung Association (ALA), which sponsors the class, about half the adults who smoke were regular smokers by age 18. “Theses numbers are only going to get worse,” says Kristine Lewis of the ALA. “The tobacco industry is turning to teens.”

How did the students do? Jodi has been cigaretteless for three months. But she’s the only one. Her classmate Adam Cushman is slowly putting his way back to three packs a day. The 16-year-old says he wants to stop, “but the way things are going, I doubt I’ll be able to.”


Seventeen, June 1996.

De acordo com o texto, o Segundo motivo alegado por Jodi para querer parar de fumar foi:

Alternativas
Q2934932 Inglês

Sobre as tiras, marque a alternativa correta.

Imagem associada para resolução da questão

Imagem associada para resolução da questão

Alternativas
Q2934931 Pedagogia

Apesar da grande ênfase colocada na aprendizagem de Línguas Estrangeiras, notadamente do inglês, no Brasil, a justificativa social para a aprendizagem dessa língua só recentemente tem preocupado aqueles que trabalham com o ensino. Sobre a relevância social do ensino de inglês no País, de acordo com Moita Lopes (1996), no livro Oficina de Lingüística Aplicada, assinale a alternativa incorreta:

Alternativas
Q2934930 Pedagogia

Segundo Moita Lopes (1996), embora não se questione a aprendizagem de outras matérias do currículo, as Línguas Estrangeiras são freqüentemente apontadas como desnecessárias na formação do aprendiz da escola pública. Sobre o ensino da língua inglesa, especificamente, na escola pública brasileira, é incorreto afirmar:

Alternativas
Q2934929 Pedagogia

Segundo Moita Lopes (1996), o que ocorre entre o aluno e o professor na sala de aula de língua estrangeira pode, em última análise, esclarecer o processo de construção do conhecimento. A partir dessa colocação, é incorreto afirmar:

Alternativas
Q2934928 Pedagogia

Segundo Abrahão (1999), escassos são os trabalhos de pesquisa que têm por foco cursos de formação de professores de segunda língua e de língua estrangeira presentes na literatura especializada. Inúmeras são, entretanto, as propostas para a formação pré-serviço e em serviço surgidas na década de 1990. Essas propostas têm defendido ações essenciais, como as elencadas abaixo, exceto:

Alternativas
Q2934925 Pedagogia

Segundo Almeida Filho (1993), a abordagem de ensino é um conjunto de disposições de que o professor dispõe para orientar todas as ações da operação global de ensinar uma língua estrangeira. Quanto às diferentes abordagens de ensino de língua estrangeira, podemos afirmar:

Alternativas
Q2934921 Pedagogia

Segundo os pressupostos da Lingüística Aplicada, é incorreto afirmar:

Alternativas
Q2934914 Pedagogia

Sobre a atuação do professor de línguas estrangeiras, segundo os pressupostos da Lingüística Aplicada, é incorreto afirmar:

Alternativas
Q2925980 Inglês

Read the text below.


Many years ago, when I ___ a college student, I ___ very interesting people and ___ good friends then! Today we ___ busy professionals, but, from time to time, we ___ together to talk about the good old days!


Regarding verb tenses and verb forms, choose the option that completes the text correctly.

Alternativas
Q2925979 Inglês

The sentence "If I arrive early, I will give you a phone call." is in the

Alternativas
Respostas
541: D
542: A
543: E
544: B
545: B
546: C
547: A
548: D
549: B
550: D
551: C
552: A
553: E
554: E
555: B
556: A
557: E
558: C
559: D
560: A