Questões de Vestibular MACKENZIE 2010 para Vestibular
Foram encontradas 60 questões
Texto para a questão
Texto para a questão
Texto para a questão
I. Há a presença de elementos típicos da linguagem falada, como o uso de aí para marcar a continuidade textual. II. Formas como podia, estava e corria indicam que o processo verbal por elas descrito ocorre simultaneamente ao momento de fala do garoto. III. Rasante refere-se ao modo como o garoto executou uma manobra enquanto, no sonho, voava.
Assinale:
Textos para a questão
02 por Babilônia, me achei,
03 onde sentado chorei
04 as lembranças de Sião
05 e quanto nela passei.
06 Ali, o rio corrente
07 de meus olhos foi manado;
08 e, tudo bem comparado,
09 Babilônia ao mal presente,
10 Sião ao tempo passado.
[...]
11 Mas ó tu, terra de Glória,
12 se eu nunca vi tua essência,
13 como me lembras na ausência?
14 Não me lembras na memória
15 senão na reminiscência.
Sôbolos = sobre os
Sião = Jerusalém
Textos para a questão
02 por Babilônia, me achei,
03 onde sentado chorei
04 as lembranças de Sião
05 e quanto nela passei.
06 Ali, o rio corrente
07 de meus olhos foi manado;
08 e, tudo bem comparado,
09 Babilônia ao mal presente,
10 Sião ao tempo passado.
[...]
11 Mas ó tu, terra de Glória,
12 se eu nunca vi tua essência,
13 como me lembras na ausência?
14 Não me lembras na memória
15 senão na reminiscência.
Sôbolos = sobre os
Sião = Jerusalém
Textos para a questão
02 difícil é saber
03 onde começa o rio;
04 onde a lama
05 começa do rio;
06 onde a terra
07 começa da lama;
08 onde o homem,
09 onde a pele
10 começa da lama;
11 onde começa o homem
12 naquele homem.
Textos para a questão
02 difícil é saber
03 onde começa o rio;
04 onde a lama
05 começa do rio;
06 onde a terra
07 começa da lama;
08 onde o homem,
09 onde a pele
10 começa da lama;
11 onde começa o homem
12 naquele homem.
Textos para a questão
02 difícil é saber
03 onde começa o rio;
04 onde a lama
05 começa do rio;
06 onde a terra
07 começa da lama;
08 onde o homem,
09 onde a pele
10 começa da lama;
11 onde começa o homem
12 naquele homem.
I. O caráter literário de I e de II resulta da beleza, concisão e clareza da linguagem utilizada pelos autores para registrar fidedignamente um universo típica e exclusivamente brasileiro.
II. O valor literário de I e II deve-se ao especial tratamento linguístico que confere às palavras sentidos múltiplos.
III. O efeito conotativo dos textos permite dizer que tanto o homem referido em I, quanto o sertão referido em II, transcendem os limites do regional para representarem valores universais.
Assinale:
Get into a comfortable, relaxed position. / Shut your eyes and turn your attention inwards. / Think about that assertive experience (real or imagined, yours or someone else’s) and really get into it. / Re-live it as though you are there all over again. / See everything there is to see, / the face of the other person or people / and how they’re responding to you. / Hear the sound of your own voice as you speak. / Hear the sound of any other voices. / Feel really good about the situation. / Feel confident and assertive / and enjoy the feeling. / And when you’re deeply involved in those feelings, capture them for a few seconds with your word, image or gesture. / Stay in the experience a while longer but take away the word, image or gesture. / And now come slowly and gently back to the room.
Get into a comfortable, relaxed position. / Shut your eyes and turn your attention inwards. / Think about that assertive experience (real or imagined, yours or someone else’s) and really get into it. / Re-live it as though you are there all over again. / See everything there is to see, / the face of the other person or people / and how they’re responding to you. / Hear the sound of your own voice as you speak. / Hear the sound of any other voices. / Feel really good about the situation. / Feel confident and assertive / and enjoy the feeling. / And when you’re deeply involved in those feelings, capture them for a few seconds with your word, image or gesture. / Stay in the experience a while longer but take away the word, image or gesture. / And now come slowly and gently back to the room.
Brazil’s presidential biopic
Lula, sanitised
SÃO PAULO
For all that, the film is very watchable. It opens in the poor north-east, where Lula was born into a landscape of bright red soil and cacti, and ends with his rise as a metalworkers’ union leader in the industrial belt of São Paulo in the 1970s. This is a candyfloss version of the story, however. Lula’s reverses are shown: the little finger lost to a lathe, the death of his first wife and child in childbirth. But he is too good to be true: a perfect student, perfect husband and political moderate who abhorred violence.
The book on which the film is based, by contrast, quotes Lula as approving of an incident in which a director of a factory that is on strike is thrown out of a window. In the film he runs from the factory appalled. That is a shame. A more nuanced telling would not detract from Lula’s remarkable life story and achievement.
The film is doing well at the box office. Its producers say it is running more strongly in the north-east than in the populous south-east, which means it mirrors Ms Rousseff’s fortunes in the polls. There are plans to show the film on mobile screens in places with no cinema. It may get an airing on television, though there is no such deal in place yet.
All this helps a process of mythmaking around Lula that is already well under way. Catching some of Lula’s stardust is Ms Rousseff’s best hope for capturing the presidency in October, and there are some signs that this is happening. The gap between her and José Serra, her main rival, halved between March and December last year and now stands at 14 points. Competing against a celluloid legend is not easy.
Brazil’s presidential biopic
Lula, sanitised
SÃO PAULO
For all that, the film is very watchable. It opens in the poor north-east, where Lula was born into a landscape of bright red soil and cacti, and ends with his rise as a metalworkers’ union leader in the industrial belt of São Paulo in the 1970s. This is a candyfloss version of the story, however. Lula’s reverses are shown: the little finger lost to a lathe, the death of his first wife and child in childbirth. But he is too good to be true: a perfect student, perfect husband and political moderate who abhorred violence.
The book on which the film is based, by contrast, quotes Lula as approving of an incident in which a director of a factory that is on strike is thrown out of a window. In the film he runs from the factory appalled. That is a shame. A more nuanced telling would not detract from Lula’s remarkable life story and achievement.
The film is doing well at the box office. Its producers say it is running more strongly in the north-east than in the populous south-east, which means it mirrors Ms Rousseff’s fortunes in the polls. There are plans to show the film on mobile screens in places with no cinema. It may get an airing on television, though there is no such deal in place yet.
All this helps a process of mythmaking around Lula that is already well under way. Catching some of Lula’s stardust is Ms Rousseff’s best hope for capturing the presidency in October, and there are some signs that this is happening. The gap between her and José Serra, her main rival, halved between March and December last year and now stands at 14 points. Competing against a celluloid legend is not easy.
I. Not only Fábio Barreto but also Oliver Stone have turned living politicians into myths. II. Dilma Rousseff will surely benefit from the release of the movie. III. An incident that took place in a factory is depicted differently from the way it really happened. IV. The film is about to be available for cell phones next year. V. Until now producers have had no idea of how well the film is doing in the movie theaters.
The Boom Is Nigh
Why the coming recovery will hurt like hell.
Here is what you really need to know: a Sonic Boom is coming. It will be caused by globalization. And while globalization may be driving you crazy, it’s just getting started. Thirty years ago, Shenzhen, China, did not exist; today, it has nearly 9 million residents, roughly the same as New York City. In a single generation, it has grown from a village of tarpaper shacks into an important urban center. It has become the world’s fourth-busiest port, busier than Los Angeles and Long Beach combined. Never before has a great city been built so fast, nor a productive economy established from so little.
The international recession that began in 2008 has made the Sonic Boom quieter, but history shows that when a crisis ends, the larger trends in place before the crisis usually resume. Shenzhen represents the larger trend of growth, change, and transformation at unprecedented velocity. Thanks to vast increases in productivity, worldwide economic growth soon will pick up, creating rising prosperity and higher living standards for most people in most nations. The world will be far more interconnected, leading to better and more affordable products, as well as ever better communication among nations.
But there’s a big catch: just as favorable economic and social trends are likely to resume, many problems that have characterized recent decades are likely to get worse, too. Job instability, economic insecurity, a sense of turmoil, the fear that even when things seem good a hammer is about to fall—these are also part of the larger trend. As world economies become ever more linked by computers, job stress will become a 24/7 affair. Frequent shakeups in industries will cause increasing uncertainty. The horizon has never been brighter, but we may not feel particularly happy about it.
The Boom Is Nigh
Why the coming recovery will hurt like hell.
Here is what you really need to know: a Sonic Boom is coming. It will be caused by globalization. And while globalization may be driving you crazy, it’s just getting started. Thirty years ago, Shenzhen, China, did not exist; today, it has nearly 9 million residents, roughly the same as New York City. In a single generation, it has grown from a village of tarpaper shacks into an important urban center. It has become the world’s fourth-busiest port, busier than Los Angeles and Long Beach combined. Never before has a great city been built so fast, nor a productive economy established from so little.
The international recession that began in 2008 has made the Sonic Boom quieter, but history shows that when a crisis ends, the larger trends in place before the crisis usually resume. Shenzhen represents the larger trend of growth, change, and transformation at unprecedented velocity. Thanks to vast increases in productivity, worldwide economic growth soon will pick up, creating rising prosperity and higher living standards for most people in most nations. The world will be far more interconnected, leading to better and more affordable products, as well as ever better communication among nations.
But there’s a big catch: just as favorable economic and social trends are likely to resume, many problems that have characterized recent decades are likely to get worse, too. Job instability, economic insecurity, a sense of turmoil, the fear that even when things seem good a hammer is about to fall—these are also part of the larger trend. As world economies become ever more linked by computers, job stress will become a 24/7 affair. Frequent shakeups in industries will cause increasing uncertainty. The horizon has never been brighter, but we may not feel particularly happy about it.
Illustration by David Simond
According to the cartoon,