Questões de Vestibular IF-PR 2017 para Vestibular
Foram encontradas 50 questões
Leia o texto a seguir.
E se o oceano incendiar
E se cair neve no sertão
E se o urubu cocorocar
E se o botafogo for campeão
E se o meu dinheiro não faltar
E se o delegado for gentil
E se tiver bife no jantar
E se o carnaval cair em abril
E se o telefone funcionar
(...)
E se tiver sopa pro peão (Francis Hime)
Assinale a alternativa correta.
Leia o poema Açúcar, de Ferreira Gullar, com atenção.
Em lugares distantes, onde não há hospital
nem escola homens que não sabem ler e morrem de fome
aos 27 anos
plantaram e colheram a cana
que viraria açúcar.
Em usinas escuras,
homens de vida amarga
e dura
produziram este açúcar
branco e puro
com que adoço meu café esta manhã em Ipanema.
Os recursos expressivos e o enfoque do tema, oferecem ao texto um caráter:
A respeito dos anúncios, analise as afirmativas a seguir.
I) Ambos os textos exploram o recurso da polissemia.
II) Os textos são impróprios; utilizam palavras ofensivas ou da gíria.
III) O primeiro texto utiliza o recurso da intertextualidade, remetendo a “pai dos burros”.
IV) No segundo texto, “pública” e “privada” são antônimos.
V) As palavras “burro” e “privada” foram usadas em seu sentido denotativo.
Estão corretas apenas:
O texto a seguir servirá de base para a questão.
Os financiamentos imobiliários com recursos da poupança ([Sistema Brasileiro de Poupança e Empréstimo] SBPE) totalizaram R$ 20,6 bilhões no primeiro semestre deste ano, montante 9,1% inferior ao registrado em igual intervalo de 2016, de acordo com a Associação Brasileira das Entidades de Crédito Imobiliário e Poupança (Abecip).
Foram financiadas, com recursos das cadernetas de poupança, 82,5 mil unidades entre aquisições e construções no período, recuo de 17,9% em relação à primeira metade de 2016, quando 100,5 mil imóveis foram financiados.
Apenas em junho, conforme a Abecip, o montante de financiamento imobiliário alcançou R$ 3,8 bilhões, alta de 6,5% em relação a maio, mas retração de 11,1% no período de um ano. A quantidade de imóveis financiados no mês passado subiu 5,7% e recuou 22%, nas mesmas bases de comparações, para 15,4 mil unidades.
“O primeiro semestre foi ruim. Esperamos decrescimento menor ou ao menos empate com o ano passado e isso não aconteceu, mas o patamar de empréstimos continuou interessante”, disse o presidente da Abecip, Gilberto Abreu, em coletiva de imprensa, lembrando que as empresas estão em um ritmo menor de construção de novos empreendimentos após um ciclo de elevados estoques (Estadão, 26/07/2017).
Indique, pela numeração acima, as estratégias presentes no artigo do Estadão:
O texto a seguir servirá de base para a questão.
Os financiamentos imobiliários com recursos da poupança ([Sistema Brasileiro de Poupança e Empréstimo] SBPE) totalizaram R$ 20,6 bilhões no primeiro semestre deste ano, montante 9,1% inferior ao registrado em igual intervalo de 2016, de acordo com a Associação Brasileira das Entidades de Crédito Imobiliário e Poupança (Abecip).
Foram financiadas, com recursos das cadernetas de poupança, 82,5 mil unidades entre aquisições e construções no período, recuo de 17,9% em relação à primeira metade de 2016, quando 100,5 mil imóveis foram financiados.
Apenas em junho, conforme a Abecip, o montante de financiamento imobiliário alcançou R$ 3,8 bilhões, alta de 6,5% em relação a maio, mas retração de 11,1% no período de um ano. A quantidade de imóveis financiados no mês passado subiu 5,7% e recuou 22%, nas mesmas bases de comparações, para 15,4 mil unidades.
“O primeiro semestre foi ruim. Esperamos decrescimento menor ou ao menos empate com o ano passado e isso não aconteceu, mas o patamar de empréstimos continuou interessante”, disse o presidente da Abecip, Gilberto Abreu, em coletiva de imprensa, lembrando que as empresas estão em um ritmo menor de construção de novos empreendimentos após um ciclo de elevados estoques (Estadão, 26/07/2017).
O texto a seguir servirá de base para a questão.
Os financiamentos imobiliários com recursos da poupança ([Sistema Brasileiro de Poupança e Empréstimo] SBPE) totalizaram R$ 20,6 bilhões no primeiro semestre deste ano, montante 9,1% inferior ao registrado em igual intervalo de 2016, de acordo com a Associação Brasileira das Entidades de Crédito Imobiliário e Poupança (Abecip).
Foram financiadas, com recursos das cadernetas de poupança, 82,5 mil unidades entre aquisições e construções no período, recuo de 17,9% em relação à primeira metade de 2016, quando 100,5 mil imóveis foram financiados.
Apenas em junho, conforme a Abecip, o montante de financiamento imobiliário alcançou R$ 3,8 bilhões, alta de 6,5% em relação a maio, mas retração de 11,1% no período de um ano. A quantidade de imóveis financiados no mês passado subiu 5,7% e recuou 22%, nas mesmas bases de comparações, para 15,4 mil unidades.
“O primeiro semestre foi ruim. Esperamos decrescimento menor ou ao menos empate com o ano passado e isso não aconteceu, mas o patamar de empréstimos continuou interessante”, disse o presidente da Abecip, Gilberto Abreu, em coletiva de imprensa, lembrando que as empresas estão em um ritmo menor de construção de novos empreendimentos após um ciclo de elevados estoques (Estadão, 26/07/2017).
August 16, 2017 / 10:00 AM
Four years without Big Ben’s bongs? It can’t be right, says UK PM May
LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Theresa May said on Wednesday it could not be right for “Big Ben”, the bell in the British parliament’s clock tower whose bongs (1)_______, to fall silent for four years during renovations. May joined other politicians who have protested at the news that the great bell, which has rung every hour for most of the past 157 years, would cease its bongs to ensure the safety of workers carrying out renovations on the tower.
“Of course we want to ensure that people are safe at work, but it can’t be right for Big Ben to be silent for four years,” May told reporters.
“I hope that the Speaker (of the House of Commons) ... will urgently look into this and ensure that we can hear Big Ben through those four years.”
Big Ben’s bongs, which are heard marking the start of some of the BBC’s flagship news bulletins, are part of the soundtrack of daily life in the British capital and beyond.
Officially known as the Elizabeth Tower, the clock tower that houses Big Ben is believed to be the most photographed building in the United Kingdom. May’s comments were more restrained than those of her Brexit minister, David Davis, who said on Tuesday that (2)_____.
Another Conservative politician, member of parliament Nigel Evans, suggested earlier on Wednesday that the bongs could be switched back on every evening when the workers carrying out the renovations of the clock tower finished for the day.
Steve Jaggs, parliament’s Keeper of the Great Clock, had announced this week that Big Ben would stop its regular chimes at midday (1100 GMT) on Monday, Aug. 21, inviting members of the public to gather nearby to hear the final bongs.
The bell will still toll for important (3)_____ but will otherwise remain silent until 2021.
Reporting by Estelle Shirbon; editing by Michael
Holden
(Adaptado de
Now choose the correct alternative.
August 16, 2017 / 10:00 AM
Four years without Big Ben’s bongs? It can’t be right, says UK PM May
LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Theresa May said on Wednesday it could not be right for “Big Ben”, the bell in the British parliament’s clock tower whose bongs (1)_______, to fall silent for four years during renovations. May joined other politicians who have protested at the news that the great bell, which has rung every hour for most of the past 157 years, would cease its bongs to ensure the safety of workers carrying out renovations on the tower.
“Of course we want to ensure that people are safe at work, but it can’t be right for Big Ben to be silent for four years,” May told reporters.
“I hope that the Speaker (of the House of Commons) ... will urgently look into this and ensure that we can hear Big Ben through those four years.”
Big Ben’s bongs, which are heard marking the start of some of the BBC’s flagship news bulletins, are part of the soundtrack of daily life in the British capital and beyond.
Officially known as the Elizabeth Tower, the clock tower that houses Big Ben is believed to be the most photographed building in the United Kingdom. May’s comments were more restrained than those of her Brexit minister, David Davis, who said on Tuesday that (2)_____.
Another Conservative politician, member of parliament Nigel Evans, suggested earlier on Wednesday that the bongs could be switched back on every evening when the workers carrying out the renovations of the clock tower finished for the day.
Steve Jaggs, parliament’s Keeper of the Great Clock, had announced this week that Big Ben would stop its regular chimes at midday (1100 GMT) on Monday, Aug. 21, inviting members of the public to gather nearby to hear the final bongs.
The bell will still toll for important (3)_____ but will otherwise remain silent until 2021.
Reporting by Estelle Shirbon; editing by Michael
Holden
(Adaptado de
August 16, 2017 / 10:00 AM
Four years without Big Ben’s bongs? It can’t be right, says UK PM May
LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Theresa May said on Wednesday it could not be right for “Big Ben”, the bell in the British parliament’s clock tower whose bongs (1)_______, to fall silent for four years during renovations. May joined other politicians who have protested at the news that the great bell, which has rung every hour for most of the past 157 years, would cease its bongs to ensure the safety of workers carrying out renovations on the tower.
“Of course we want to ensure that people are safe at work, but it can’t be right for Big Ben to be silent for four years,” May told reporters.
“I hope that the Speaker (of the House of Commons) ... will urgently look into this and ensure that we can hear Big Ben through those four years.”
Big Ben’s bongs, which are heard marking the start of some of the BBC’s flagship news bulletins, are part of the soundtrack of daily life in the British capital and beyond.
Officially known as the Elizabeth Tower, the clock tower that houses Big Ben is believed to be the most photographed building in the United Kingdom. May’s comments were more restrained than those of her Brexit minister, David Davis, who said on Tuesday that (2)_____.
Another Conservative politician, member of parliament Nigel Evans, suggested earlier on Wednesday that the bongs could be switched back on every evening when the workers carrying out the renovations of the clock tower finished for the day.
Steve Jaggs, parliament’s Keeper of the Great Clock, had announced this week that Big Ben would stop its regular chimes at midday (1100 GMT) on Monday, Aug. 21, inviting members of the public to gather nearby to hear the final bongs.
The bell will still toll for important (3)_____ but will otherwise remain silent until 2021.
Reporting by Estelle Shirbon; editing by Michael
Holden
(Adaptado de
August 16, 2017 / 10:00 AM
Four years without Big Ben’s bongs? It can’t be right, says UK PM May
LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Theresa May said on Wednesday it could not be right for “Big Ben”, the bell in the British parliament’s clock tower whose bongs (1)_______, to fall silent for four years during renovations. May joined other politicians who have protested at the news that the great bell, which has rung every hour for most of the past 157 years, would cease its bongs to ensure the safety of workers carrying out renovations on the tower.
“Of course we want to ensure that people are safe at work, but it can’t be right for Big Ben to be silent for four years,” May told reporters.
“I hope that the Speaker (of the House of Commons) ... will urgently look into this and ensure that we can hear Big Ben through those four years.”
Big Ben’s bongs, which are heard marking the start of some of the BBC’s flagship news bulletins, are part of the soundtrack of daily life in the British capital and beyond.
Officially known as the Elizabeth Tower, the clock tower that houses Big Ben is believed to be the most photographed building in the United Kingdom. May’s comments were more restrained than those of her Brexit minister, David Davis, who said on Tuesday that (2)_____.
Another Conservative politician, member of parliament Nigel Evans, suggested earlier on Wednesday that the bongs could be switched back on every evening when the workers carrying out the renovations of the clock tower finished for the day.
Steve Jaggs, parliament’s Keeper of the Great Clock, had announced this week that Big Ben would stop its regular chimes at midday (1100 GMT) on Monday, Aug. 21, inviting members of the public to gather nearby to hear the final bongs.
The bell will still toll for important (3)_____ but will otherwise remain silent until 2021.
Reporting by Estelle Shirbon; editing by Michael
Holden
(Adaptado de
August 16, 2017 / 10:00 AM
Four years without Big Ben’s bongs? It can’t be right, says UK PM May
LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Theresa May said on Wednesday it could not be right for “Big Ben”, the bell in the British parliament’s clock tower whose bongs (1)_______, to fall silent for four years during renovations. May joined other politicians who have protested at the news that the great bell, which has rung every hour for most of the past 157 years, would cease its bongs to ensure the safety of workers carrying out renovations on the tower.
“Of course we want to ensure that people are safe at work, but it can’t be right for Big Ben to be silent for four years,” May told reporters.
“I hope that the Speaker (of the House of Commons) ... will urgently look into this and ensure that we can hear Big Ben through those four years.”
Big Ben’s bongs, which are heard marking the start of some of the BBC’s flagship news bulletins, are part of the soundtrack of daily life in the British capital and beyond.
Officially known as the Elizabeth Tower, the clock tower that houses Big Ben is believed to be the most photographed building in the United Kingdom. May’s comments were more restrained than those of her Brexit minister, David Davis, who said on Tuesday that (2)_____.
Another Conservative politician, member of parliament Nigel Evans, suggested earlier on Wednesday that the bongs could be switched back on every evening when the workers carrying out the renovations of the clock tower finished for the day.
Steve Jaggs, parliament’s Keeper of the Great Clock, had announced this week that Big Ben would stop its regular chimes at midday (1100 GMT) on Monday, Aug. 21, inviting members of the public to gather nearby to hear the final bongs.
The bell will still toll for important (3)_____ but will otherwise remain silent until 2021.
Reporting by Estelle Shirbon; editing by Michael
Holden
(Adaptado de