Questões Militares
Sobre plural dos substantivos | plural of nouns em inglês
Foram encontradas 23 questões
Read the text and answer the question.
Rude
Magic
Can I have your daughter for the rest of my life? Say yes, say yes
‘Cause I need to know
You say I’ll never get your blessing till the day I die
Tough luck my friend but the answer is no!
Why you gotta be so rude?
Don’t you know I’m human too
Why you gotta be so rude
I’m gonna marry her anyway
(Marry that girl) Marry her anyway
(Marry that girl) Yeah no matter what you say
(Marry that girl) And we’ll be a family
https://www.vagalume.com.br/magic-11/rude.html
Leia o texto para responder à questão.
By the end of the twentieth century English was already well on its way to becoming a genuine lingua franca. Just as in the Middle Ages Latin became for a time a language of international communication, so English is now commonly used in exchanges between, say, Japanese and Argentinian business people or between Singaporeans and their Vietnamese counterparts.
A number of researchers have studied lingua franca conversations and have noted a number of somewhat surprising characteristics, including:
• Increasing of redundancy by adding prepositions (We have to study about... and Can we discuss about...?).
• Large use of certain verbs of high semantic generality, such as do, have, make, put, take.
• Pluralisation of nouns which are considered uncountable in native-speaker English (advices, staffs).
The evidence suggests that non-native speakers are not conforming to a native English standard. Indeed they seem to get along perfectly well despite the fact that they miss things out and put things in which they ‘should not do’. Not only this, but they are actually better at ‘accommodating’ than native speakers are when talking to second language speakers.
(Jeremy Harmer. The practice of English language teaching. Adaptado)
Read the text and answer question
Good day! My name is Sheila. I’m from Melbourne, Australia. My ___________ is from Montreal, Canada. We live in Sydney. A lot of ___________ living in Australia come from other ___________.
Choose the best alternative to complete the blanks in the text:
Na Língua Inglesa há regras específicas para a construção do plural dos substantivos.
A seguir, encontra-se um pequeno trecho de um texto sobre inteligências múltiplas cujos substantivos que estão entre parênteses no singular, deverão ser escritos na forma plural.
[...] Linguistic - using ___________ (word) effectively. These ____________ (learner) like reading, taking notes in their ________ (class), making up poetry or ___________(story). Interpersonal - understanding, interacting with others. These ______________ (student) learn through interaction. They like group ___________ (activity), ____________ (seminar), __________ (debate), _________ (interview). Logical-Mathematical - reasoning, calculating. __________ (Person) who excel in this intelligence like to experiment, solve ____________ (puzzle) play with logic __________ (game), read about ___________ (investigation), and solve ___________ (mystery).
Assinale a alternativa que completa correta e respectivamente as lacunas considerando os plurais de substantivos em inglês americano.
Read the text and answer question
Traditional American cake bars
Recipe:
100g butter 1tsp. vanilla ½ tsp baking powder
200g sugar ¼ tsp salt 100g chopped walnuts
2 eggs 100g flour 50g chocolate U
Melt _____ chocolate and butter and mix carefully.
Add _____ sugar and mix again until smooth. Leave to cool.
Add _____ eggs and vanilla and mix.
Add _____ flour, baking powder, and salt, and mix until well-combined.
Stir in the walnuts.
Put the mix in a cake tin and cook for 25min at 175°C.
Eat with fruit or ice cream.
Read the dialogue below and answer question 31.
Which of the alternatives completes the sentence correctly?
If you need ____________about what to remove from your _______ to
avoid problems at check in, this leaflet is for you.
EXTRACT 1
Japan’s shipyards remain intact after quake
Japan’s major shipyards escaped the full impact of the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that struck the northeastern coast of the country with full force. An official at the Japan Ship Exporters’ Association said the devastating natural disaster “will have no impact on future export ship orders at all”. Although several small shipyards in the quake-hit areas were affected, major Japanese shipyards that build large vessels for exports are concentrated in western Japan and remain intact, the official said. Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding sustained “slight material damages” in the company’s Kasai Center and Chiba Works but did not consider such slight damages would cause serious impact on operations. “The rotational schedule of interruption of power supply due to the earthquake may affect our operation at our works and subsidiaries. However, the degree of the impact is not known now,” the company said in a statement. Japanese export ship orders rose for the 15th consecutive month in February o a year-on-year basis. Japanese shipbuilders received orders for 277 export vessels – 259 bulk carriers, 10 oil tankers and eight general cargo vessels – in the April-February period.
(Adapted from: www.australianmerchantnavy.com, March 2011)
EXTRACT 2
Tsnunami Debris Expected on U.S. Shores in 3 Years
The powerful tsunami triggered by the 9.0 Japanese earthquake destroyed coastal towns near Sendai, washing such things as houses and cars into the ocean. Projections of where this debris might head have been made at the international Pacific Research Center, university of Hawaii at Manoa. What their model predicts about the tsunami debris is that they first spread out eastward from the Japan Coast in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre. In a year, the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument will see pieces washing up on its shores; in two years, the remaining Hawaiian islands will see some effects; in three years, the plume will reach the US West Coast, dumping debris on Californian beaches and the beaches of British Columbia, Alaska, and Baja California. The debris will then drift into the famous floating junk yard, the North Pacific Garbage Patch, where it will wander around and break into smaller and smaller pieces. In five years, Hawaii shores can expect to see another barrage of debris that is stronger and longer-lasting than the first one. Much of the debris leaving the North Pacific Garbage Patch ends up on Hawaii’s reefs and beaches. These model projections will help to guide clean-up and tracking operations.
(Adapted from: www.geog.ucsb.edu, April 2011)