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Q576077 Estatística
Para estimar a proporção de atletas não fumantes, foi retirada uma amostra aleatória de 1600 atletas. Na amostra foi constatado que 20% dos atletas são fumantes. Sabe-se que, para construir um intervalo de aproximadamente 95% de confiança para a variável proporção, o valor tabelado é aproximadamente igual a 2 desvios-padrão. Assim, o tamanho da amostra para se estimar um intervalo de aproximadamente 95% de confiança, para o percentual de atletas não fumantes, de modo que o erro de estimação seja, no máximo, igual a 0,01, é igual a:
Alternativas
Q576076 Raciocínio Lógico
Paulo não é padre e Pedro não é professor. Paulo é padre ou Péricles é pedreiro. Se Paulinha é professora, então Pedrita é paisagista. Se Pedrita não é paisagista, então Péricles não é pedreiro. Desse modo, pode-se, corretamente, concluir que:
Alternativas
Q576075 Matemática
Sobre as relações a seguir tem-se que: C ≠ C1 é condição necessária para A = A1 . P ≠ P1 é condição suficiente para C = C1 . A ≠ A1 é condição necessária para C ≠ C1 . P = P1 é condição suficiente para A = A1 . Com essas informações, tem-se que:
Alternativas
Q576074 Estatística
O coeficiente de correlação de duas variáveis aleatórias x e y é igual 0,7, ou seja: δ (x , y) = 0,7. O coeficiente de variabilidade de x é 0,3 ─ por γx =0,3. O coeficiente de variabilidade de y é 0,5 ─ γy =0,5. Com essas informações sobre as variáveis x e y, pode-se, corretamente, afirmar que:
Alternativas
Q576073 Matemática

Considerando-se os números:

a=(((240 )√2 )2 )1/4; b =(((320)√2/2) 2 ) e c = (710) -8√2/2) -1/2

pode-se, com certeza, afirmar que:

Alternativas
Q576071 Inglês

Text 3

                                                                                             Small, cold, and absurdly far away, Pluto has

                                                                                                            always been selfi sh with its secrets.

                THE X – FILES

      It wouldn´t be the fi rst time Pluto has confounded expectations. In 2006, the year New Horizons was launched, Pluto vanished from the list of planets and reappeared as a “dwarf planet.” That, of course, had more to do with astronomers on Earth than any celestial sleight of hand, but the truth is, Pluto has been a tough world to crack since before it was discovered.

      By the turn of the century, the hunt for that missing planet had gathered momentum: Whoever found it would earn the shiny distinction of discovering the first new planet in more than 50 years. Calling the rogue world “Planet X,”, Boston aristocrat Percival Lowell – perhaps best known for claiming to have spotted irrigation canals on the surface of Mars – vigorously took up the search. Lowell had built his own observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, and in 1905 it became the epicenter of the search for Planet X, with Lowell calculating and recalculating its probable position and borrowing equipment for the hunt. 

      But Lowell died in 1916, without knowing that Planet X really existed.

      Fast-forward to 1930. Late one February afternoon, 24-year-old Clyde Tombaugh was parked in his spot at Lowell Observatory. A transplant from the farm fields of Kansas, Tombaugh had been assigned the task of searching for Lowell`s elusive planet. He had no formal training in astronomy but had developed a skill for building telescopes, sometimes from old car parts and other improbable items.

                                                                 (Source: National Geographic Magazine – July 2015 - http://

                                                                  ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ print/2015/07/ pluto/drake-text

                                                                                                                                                 (adapted))

Accordind to the text, Clyde Tombaugh had been
Alternativas
Q576070 Inglês

Text 3

                                                                                             Small, cold, and absurdly far away, Pluto has

                                                                                                            always been selfi sh with its secrets.

                THE X – FILES

      It wouldn´t be the fi rst time Pluto has confounded expectations. In 2006, the year New Horizons was launched, Pluto vanished from the list of planets and reappeared as a “dwarf planet.” That, of course, had more to do with astronomers on Earth than any celestial sleight of hand, but the truth is, Pluto has been a tough world to crack since before it was discovered.

      By the turn of the century, the hunt for that missing planet had gathered momentum: Whoever found it would earn the shiny distinction of discovering the first new planet in more than 50 years. Calling the rogue world “Planet X,”, Boston aristocrat Percival Lowell – perhaps best known for claiming to have spotted irrigation canals on the surface of Mars – vigorously took up the search. Lowell had built his own observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, and in 1905 it became the epicenter of the search for Planet X, with Lowell calculating and recalculating its probable position and borrowing equipment for the hunt. 

      But Lowell died in 1916, without knowing that Planet X really existed.

      Fast-forward to 1930. Late one February afternoon, 24-year-old Clyde Tombaugh was parked in his spot at Lowell Observatory. A transplant from the farm fields of Kansas, Tombaugh had been assigned the task of searching for Lowell`s elusive planet. He had no formal training in astronomy but had developed a skill for building telescopes, sometimes from old car parts and other improbable items.

                                                                 (Source: National Geographic Magazine – July 2015 - http://

                                                                  ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ print/2015/07/ pluto/drake-text

                                                                                                                                                 (adapted))

The sentence “Percival Lowell perhaps best known for claiming to have spotted irrigation canals on the surface of Mars” means that he
Alternativas
Q576069 Inglês

Text 3

                                                                                             Small, cold, and absurdly far away, Pluto has

                                                                                                            always been selfi sh with its secrets.

                THE X – FILES

      It wouldn´t be the fi rst time Pluto has confounded expectations. In 2006, the year New Horizons was launched, Pluto vanished from the list of planets and reappeared as a “dwarf planet.” That, of course, had more to do with astronomers on Earth than any celestial sleight of hand, but the truth is, Pluto has been a tough world to crack since before it was discovered.

      By the turn of the century, the hunt for that missing planet had gathered momentum: Whoever found it would earn the shiny distinction of discovering the first new planet in more than 50 years. Calling the rogue world “Planet X,”, Boston aristocrat Percival Lowell – perhaps best known for claiming to have spotted irrigation canals on the surface of Mars – vigorously took up the search. Lowell had built his own observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, and in 1905 it became the epicenter of the search for Planet X, with Lowell calculating and recalculating its probable position and borrowing equipment for the hunt. 

      But Lowell died in 1916, without knowing that Planet X really existed.

      Fast-forward to 1930. Late one February afternoon, 24-year-old Clyde Tombaugh was parked in his spot at Lowell Observatory. A transplant from the farm fields of Kansas, Tombaugh had been assigned the task of searching for Lowell`s elusive planet. He had no formal training in astronomy but had developed a skill for building telescopes, sometimes from old car parts and other improbable items.

                                                                 (Source: National Geographic Magazine – July 2015 - http://

                                                                  ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ print/2015/07/ pluto/drake-text

                                                                                                                                                 (adapted))

In the first paragraph, the expression “sleight of hand” means
Alternativas
Q576068 Inglês

Text 2

Read text 2 and chose the best answer to questions 25 to 27 below:

                                                                                       The United Nations`s (UN`s) Third International

                                                                                 Conference on Financing for Development in Addis                                                                                                                                                         Ababa

      The Addis Ababa Conference brings together governments, businesses and civil society to mobilize the resources needed to implement the UN`s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs - the foundation of the post- 2015 development agenda) and a new global climate agreement, both of which are due later this year. The Addis Conference is an opportunity for policymakers to turn rhetoric into action, by agreeing on the funding and fi nancial tools that can put the SDGs within reach.

      The good news is that many of the solutions, technologies, and skills needed to achieve these global goals already exist. One important factor is the transition from cash to digital payments. There is growing evidence that digitizing payments boosts transactional effi ciency, reduces costs, improves transparency and accountability, unlocks domestic resources, and drives fi nancial inclusion in the places that need it most.

      In Mexico, the government trimmed its spending on wages, pensions, and social welfare by 3.3% annually, or nearly US$1.3bn, by centralizing and digitizing its payments;

      In India, a McKinsey study estimates savings for the government of over US$22bn annually through automated payments that help reduce transaction costs and fraud.

      Not only can digital payments deliver major cost savings in straightened fiscal times, they also offer governments a rare boost on the revenue side of national ledgers. By bringing more people and businesses into the formal economy, digital payments can vastly expand a country`s tax base, providing new funds to invest in the drivers of productivity and growth.

      The financial exclusion of so many people and businesses – all potential sources of economic growth – makes no sense, particularly at a time when growth is now slowing in much of the developing world. Figures like these also demonstrate why drafts on the Addis Accord prepared in advance of the conference repeatedly call for greater financial inclusion, including for women and SME (Small and Medium Sized Enterprises).

                                                                  The Economist (Source: http://www.economistinsights.com/

                                                                              technologyinnovation/opinion/cashing-out - adapted)

According to the text
Alternativas
Q576067 Inglês

Text 2

Read text 2 and chose the best answer to questions 25 to 27 below:

                                                                                       The United Nations`s (UN`s) Third International

                                                                                 Conference on Financing for Development in Addis                                                                                                                                                         Ababa

      The Addis Ababa Conference brings together governments, businesses and civil society to mobilize the resources needed to implement the UN`s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs - the foundation of the post- 2015 development agenda) and a new global climate agreement, both of which are due later this year. The Addis Conference is an opportunity for policymakers to turn rhetoric into action, by agreeing on the funding and fi nancial tools that can put the SDGs within reach.

      The good news is that many of the solutions, technologies, and skills needed to achieve these global goals already exist. One important factor is the transition from cash to digital payments. There is growing evidence that digitizing payments boosts transactional effi ciency, reduces costs, improves transparency and accountability, unlocks domestic resources, and drives fi nancial inclusion in the places that need it most.

      In Mexico, the government trimmed its spending on wages, pensions, and social welfare by 3.3% annually, or nearly US$1.3bn, by centralizing and digitizing its payments;

      In India, a McKinsey study estimates savings for the government of over US$22bn annually through automated payments that help reduce transaction costs and fraud.

      Not only can digital payments deliver major cost savings in straightened fiscal times, they also offer governments a rare boost on the revenue side of national ledgers. By bringing more people and businesses into the formal economy, digital payments can vastly expand a country`s tax base, providing new funds to invest in the drivers of productivity and growth.

      The financial exclusion of so many people and businesses – all potential sources of economic growth – makes no sense, particularly at a time when growth is now slowing in much of the developing world. Figures like these also demonstrate why drafts on the Addis Accord prepared in advance of the conference repeatedly call for greater financial inclusion, including for women and SME (Small and Medium Sized Enterprises).

                                                                  The Economist (Source: http://www.economistinsights.com/

                                                                              technologyinnovation/opinion/cashing-out - adapted)

Text 2 above states that
Alternativas
Q576066 Inglês

Text 2

Read text 2 and chose the best answer to questions 25 to 27 below:

                                                                                       The United Nations`s (UN`s) Third International

                                                                                 Conference on Financing for Development in Addis                                                                                                                                                         Ababa

      The Addis Ababa Conference brings together governments, businesses and civil society to mobilize the resources needed to implement the UN`s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs - the foundation of the post- 2015 development agenda) and a new global climate agreement, both of which are due later this year. The Addis Conference is an opportunity for policymakers to turn rhetoric into action, by agreeing on the funding and fi nancial tools that can put the SDGs within reach.

      The good news is that many of the solutions, technologies, and skills needed to achieve these global goals already exist. One important factor is the transition from cash to digital payments. There is growing evidence that digitizing payments boosts transactional effi ciency, reduces costs, improves transparency and accountability, unlocks domestic resources, and drives fi nancial inclusion in the places that need it most.

      In Mexico, the government trimmed its spending on wages, pensions, and social welfare by 3.3% annually, or nearly US$1.3bn, by centralizing and digitizing its payments;

      In India, a McKinsey study estimates savings for the government of over US$22bn annually through automated payments that help reduce transaction costs and fraud.

      Not only can digital payments deliver major cost savings in straightened fiscal times, they also offer governments a rare boost on the revenue side of national ledgers. By bringing more people and businesses into the formal economy, digital payments can vastly expand a country`s tax base, providing new funds to invest in the drivers of productivity and growth.

      The financial exclusion of so many people and businesses – all potential sources of economic growth – makes no sense, particularly at a time when growth is now slowing in much of the developing world. Figures like these also demonstrate why drafts on the Addis Accord prepared in advance of the conference repeatedly call for greater financial inclusion, including for women and SME (Small and Medium Sized Enterprises).

                                                                  The Economist (Source: http://www.economistinsights.com/

                                                                              technologyinnovation/opinion/cashing-out - adapted)

According to text 2 above, the Addis Ababa Conference
Alternativas
Q576065 Inglês

Text 1

                                                                                                                            The good oil boys club

      It should have been a day of high excitement. A public auction on July 15th marked the end of a 77-year monopoly on oil exploration and production by Pemex, Mexico`s state-owned oil company, and ushered in a new era of foreign investment in Mexican oil that until a few years ago was considered unimaginable.

      The Mexican government had hoped that its firstever auction of shallow-water exploration blocks in the Gulf of Mexico would successfully launch the modernisation of its energy industry. In the run-up to the bidding, Mexico had sought to be as accommodating as its historic dislike for foreign oil companies allowed it to be. Juan Carlos Zepeda, head of the National Hydrocarbons Commission, the regulator, had put a premium on transparency, saying there was “zero room” for favouritism.

      When prices of Mexican crude were above $100 a barrel last year (now they are around $50), the government had spoken optimistically of a bonanza. It had predicted that four to six blocks would be sold, based on international norms.

      It did not turn out that way. The results fell well short of the government’s hopes and underscore how residual resource nationalism continues to plague the Latin American oil industry. Only two of 14 exploration blocks were awarded, both going to the same Mexican-led trio of energy fi rms. Offi cials blamed the disappointing outcome on the sagging international oil market, but their own insecurity about appearing to sell the country’s oil too cheap may also have been to blame, according to industry experts. On the day of the auction, the fi nance ministry set minimum-bid requirements that some considered onerously high; bids for four blocks were disqualifi ed because they failed to reach the offi cial fl oor.

                                                                (Source: http://www.economist.com/news/business/21657827-

                                   latinamericas-oil-fi rms-need-more-foreign-capital-historic-auctionmexico-shows)

In the sentence “Officials blamed the disappointing outcome on the sagging international oil market” the word “sagging” means
Alternativas
Q576064 Inglês

Text 1

                                                                                                                            The good oil boys club

      It should have been a day of high excitement. A public auction on July 15th marked the end of a 77-year monopoly on oil exploration and production by Pemex, Mexico`s state-owned oil company, and ushered in a new era of foreign investment in Mexican oil that until a few years ago was considered unimaginable.

      The Mexican government had hoped that its firstever auction of shallow-water exploration blocks in the Gulf of Mexico would successfully launch the modernisation of its energy industry. In the run-up to the bidding, Mexico had sought to be as accommodating as its historic dislike for foreign oil companies allowed it to be. Juan Carlos Zepeda, head of the National Hydrocarbons Commission, the regulator, had put a premium on transparency, saying there was “zero room” for favouritism.

      When prices of Mexican crude were above $100 a barrel last year (now they are around $50), the government had spoken optimistically of a bonanza. It had predicted that four to six blocks would be sold, based on international norms.

      It did not turn out that way. The results fell well short of the government’s hopes and underscore how residual resource nationalism continues to plague the Latin American oil industry. Only two of 14 exploration blocks were awarded, both going to the same Mexican-led trio of energy fi rms. Offi cials blamed the disappointing outcome on the sagging international oil market, but their own insecurity about appearing to sell the country’s oil too cheap may also have been to blame, according to industry experts. On the day of the auction, the fi nance ministry set minimum-bid requirements that some considered onerously high; bids for four blocks were disqualifi ed because they failed to reach the offi cial fl oor.

                                                                (Source: http://www.economist.com/news/business/21657827-

                                   latinamericas-oil-fi rms-need-more-foreign-capital-historic-auctionmexico-shows)

In the sentence “The results fell well short of the government`s hopes. The expression “fell well short of” means that
Alternativas
Q576063 Inglês

Text 1

                                                                                                                            The good oil boys club

      It should have been a day of high excitement. A public auction on July 15th marked the end of a 77-year monopoly on oil exploration and production by Pemex, Mexico`s state-owned oil company, and ushered in a new era of foreign investment in Mexican oil that until a few years ago was considered unimaginable.

      The Mexican government had hoped that its firstever auction of shallow-water exploration blocks in the Gulf of Mexico would successfully launch the modernisation of its energy industry. In the run-up to the bidding, Mexico had sought to be as accommodating as its historic dislike for foreign oil companies allowed it to be. Juan Carlos Zepeda, head of the National Hydrocarbons Commission, the regulator, had put a premium on transparency, saying there was “zero room” for favouritism.

      When prices of Mexican crude were above $100 a barrel last year (now they are around $50), the government had spoken optimistically of a bonanza. It had predicted that four to six blocks would be sold, based on international norms.

      It did not turn out that way. The results fell well short of the government’s hopes and underscore how residual resource nationalism continues to plague the Latin American oil industry. Only two of 14 exploration blocks were awarded, both going to the same Mexican-led trio of energy fi rms. Offi cials blamed the disappointing outcome on the sagging international oil market, but their own insecurity about appearing to sell the country’s oil too cheap may also have been to blame, according to industry experts. On the day of the auction, the fi nance ministry set minimum-bid requirements that some considered onerously high; bids for four blocks were disqualifi ed because they failed to reach the offi cial fl oor.

                                                                (Source: http://www.economist.com/news/business/21657827-

                                   latinamericas-oil-fi rms-need-more-foreign-capital-historic-auctionmexico-shows)

As stated in the passage, the public auction
Alternativas
Q576062 Inglês

Text 1

                                                                                                                            The good oil boys club

      It should have been a day of high excitement. A public auction on July 15th marked the end of a 77-year monopoly on oil exploration and production by Pemex, Mexico`s state-owned oil company, and ushered in a new era of foreign investment in Mexican oil that until a few years ago was considered unimaginable.

      The Mexican government had hoped that its firstever auction of shallow-water exploration blocks in the Gulf of Mexico would successfully launch the modernisation of its energy industry. In the run-up to the bidding, Mexico had sought to be as accommodating as its historic dislike for foreign oil companies allowed it to be. Juan Carlos Zepeda, head of the National Hydrocarbons Commission, the regulator, had put a premium on transparency, saying there was “zero room” for favouritism.

      When prices of Mexican crude were above $100 a barrel last year (now they are around $50), the government had spoken optimistically of a bonanza. It had predicted that four to six blocks would be sold, based on international norms.

      It did not turn out that way. The results fell well short of the government’s hopes and underscore how residual resource nationalism continues to plague the Latin American oil industry. Only two of 14 exploration blocks were awarded, both going to the same Mexican-led trio of energy fi rms. Offi cials blamed the disappointing outcome on the sagging international oil market, but their own insecurity about appearing to sell the country’s oil too cheap may also have been to blame, according to industry experts. On the day of the auction, the fi nance ministry set minimum-bid requirements that some considered onerously high; bids for four blocks were disqualifi ed because they failed to reach the offi cial fl oor.

                                                                (Source: http://www.economist.com/news/business/21657827-

                                   latinamericas-oil-fi rms-need-more-foreign-capital-historic-auctionmexico-shows)

According to text 1 above, Juan Carlos Zepeda
Alternativas
Q576061 Português
 Numere os fragmentos seguintes, de modo a compor um texto coeso e coerente.

( ) Este parece ser um problema para um país que, a partir de 1992, quer-se dentro de um mundo globalizado.

( ) Um dos pontos dominantes é o grande número de resenhas de livros “clássicos" traduzidos pela primeira vez no Brasil.

( ) É verdade que o número de editoras citadas no Mais! é maior, mas o espaço é regionalizado, com a hegemonia dos lançamentos das editoras do eixo Rio-São Paulo.

( ) Aqui há o rebaixamento de um procedimento modernista: sabemos que o intelectual modernista pode ser pensado como um tradutor, como um pedagogo, e o que acontece agora é que o suplemento retoma esse procedimento, porém “deslumbrado".

( ) O Mais! parece oferecer uma compensação para este “atraso', traduzindo e publicando grande quantidade de textos de autores estrangeiros de renome na cena intelectual, como Darton, Kurz, Bloom, Derrida e, ao mesmo tempo, oferecendo regularmente espaço para as traduções literárias dos Irmãos Campos.

                                                                    (Adaptado de Valdir Prigol, Leituras do presente: narrativas

                                                                       de comemoração no Mais! da Folha de São Paulo, p. 31)

A sequência correta da ordem dos fragmentos de texto é


Alternativas
Q576060 Português

Leia atentamente o texto abaixo para responder a questão.

                             

No que concerne às estruturas linguísticas do texto, assinale a opção correta.
Alternativas
Q576059 Português

Leia atentamente o texto abaixo para responder a questão.

                             

De acordo com as ideias desenvolvidas no texto, assinale a opção incorreta.
Alternativas
Q576058 Português
Assinale a opção correta quanto ao uso da pontuação.
Alternativas
Q576057 Português
Assinale a opção que contém erro gramatical.
Alternativas
Respostas
1101: E
1102: B
1103: C
1104: D
1105: A
1106: B
1107: C
1108: C
1109: A
1110: B
1111: B
1112: C
1113: E
1114: A
1115: D
1116: C
1117: A
1118: D
1119: A
1120: E