Questões Militares
Para aspirante da escola naval
Foram encontradas 1.170 questões
Resolva questões gratuitamente!
Junte-se a mais de 4 milhões de concurseiros!
Which of the alternatives completes the sentence correctly?
The population must bear in mind that ____________ the UK has moved to a treatment phase for swine flu, it is important that people all over the world continue to do everything they can to stop the virus from spreading.
(Adapted from http://nhs.uk)
Which sequence best completes the text below?
Each naval district_______ at least one base from which it and its vessels ____ , but, except for Aratu in the 2nd Naval District, most ______ not large. Aratu__________ to be the MB's number two dockyard complex outside Guanabara Bay.
(Adapted from http://www.thinkdefence.co.uk/2013/12/look--brazilian-navy/)
Which is the correct option to complete the paragraph below?
China's recent rise has made people think that everyone ________ learn Mandarin. But China itself seems to have caught the English bug. Some 175 million Chinese are now studying English in the formal educational system.
(Adapted and abridged from Newsweek)
W h ich is the best sequence to complete the paragraph?
Dangerous bactéria can become resistant to antibiotics if they
_________________ prescribed too often. That is why the overuse of
antibiotics is harmful.
What is the correct way to complete the text below?
If you are visualizing many paradisiacal swims in clear blue waters, then the Croatian islands are calling your name. Most of the residents of Croatian islands have their own small boats to travei between islands and the coast - it's ____ __________ way to get around.
(Adapted from http://www.travelchannel.com)
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.
Which of the alternatives completes the sentence correctly?
After she ______ the competition, she _______ a professional dancer.
Which is the correct alternative to complete the dialogue?
John: I've never gone horseback riding.
Sue: ______ I'd be afraid to try.
Which question word best completes the paragraph below?
Would you like to know ______ educational specialists are flocking to Finland? Partly, their interest has been stimulated by how well Finnish students scored in 2001.
(Adapted from http://www.nesweek.com)
Which is the correct option to complete the paragraph below?
The construction of means to control maritime areas will focus __________ the strategic areas ________ maritime access ______ Brazil. Two Coastal areas will continue to deserve special attention: the strip that goes ________ Santos _________ Vitória, and the area around the mouth of the Amazon River.
(Adapted from http://www.globalsecurity.org)
Which alternative contains an extract from the text in the passive voice?
Discoveries of oil off Brazil's coast were cited as justifications for increasing Brazil's navy. While the oil finds will almost certainly increase Brazil's future prosperity, the US sought to turn the strategic dialogue in Brazil away from fantasies that another country — potentially the United States — would try to seize the oil fields to a productive discussion of energy security and the importance of maintaining freedom of the seas. The April 2008 announcement of the reactivation of the US Fourth Fleet caught Brazil by surprise and provoked much negative commentary. Even many Brazilians not prone to accept the wild-eyed theories of U.S. intentions to invade the Amazon suspected that the announcement, coming as it did on the heels of President Lula' s announcement that Brazil had discovered more oil off the Brazilian coast, could not have been a coincidence.
(Adapted from http://www.globalsecurity.org)
Which sequence best completes the text below?
On _____ Monday, September 2nd _____ International Olympic Committee's (IOC) inspectors completed their fifth trip to Rio and, at ____ press conference wrapping up _____ trip, gave organizers cautious approval of_____ way things are going.
(Adapted from The Rio Times - Weekly Online Edition, Issue LVIII)
What is the correct way to complete the text below?
Learning a second language is not _______ learning a first language. It is _________.
Which sequence best completes the text below?
On 18 December 2008, President Lula signed the National Defense Strategy, ________ a fifteen month drafting exercise. The document was principally drafted by Minister for Strategic Planning Roberto Mangabeira Unger, and it provides a security policy framework that places defense in the context of the government's broader goal of national development. In terms of _________ the relationship among the strategic tasks of "sea denial", "sea control" and "power projection", the Brazilian Navy will be ruled by an unequal and joint development. If the Navy accepted _____ the same weight to all three objectives, there would be a big risk ________ mediocre in all of them. Although all of them deserve __________, this will happen in a certain order and sequence.
(Adapted from http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/brazil/navy.htm)
How New Words Are Created
Below we can find the description of five different processes that have led to the creation of new words in the English language.
(I) ________
Many of the new words added to the ever-growing lexicon of the English language are just created out of the blue, and often have líttle or no etymological pedigree. A good example is the word dog, etymologically unrelated to any other known word, which, in the late Middle Ages, suddenly and mysteriously displaced the Old English word hound (or hund) which had served for centuries.
(II) ___________
Some words arise simply as shortened forms of longer words (exam, gym, lab, bus, vet, phone and burger are some obvious and wellused examples). Perhaps less obvious is the derivation of words like goodbye (a shortening of God-be-with-you) and hello (a shortened form of the Old English for "whole be thou").
(III) ______________
Like many languages, English allows the formation of words by joining together shorter words (e.g. airport, seashore, fireplace, etc.). The concatenation of words in English may even allow for different meanings depending on the order of combination (e.g. houseboat/boathouse, casebook/bookcase, etc) .
(IV) _______
The drift of word meanings over time often arises, often but not always due to catachresis. By some estimates, over half of all words adopted into English from Latin have changed their meaning in some way over time, often drastically. For example, smart originally meant sharp, cutting or painful; A more modern example is the changing meaning of gay from merry to homosexual (and, in some circles in more recent years, to stupid or bad).
(V) ______
New words may arise due to mishearings or misrenderings. According to the "Oxford English Dictionary", there are at least 350 words in English dictionaries (most of them thankfully quite obscure) that owe their existence purely to typos or other misrenderings (e.g. shamefaced from the original shamefast, penthouse from pentice, sweetheart from sweetard, buttonhole from button-hold, etc).
(Adapted from http://wviw.thehistoryofenglish.com/issues_new.html)
The following headings have been removed from the text and replaced by (I), (II), (III), (IV) and (V). Choose the alternative which presents them in the correct order.
1- Change in the Meaning of Existing Words
2- Creation from Scratch
3- Fusion or Compounding Existing Words
4- Truncation or Clipping
5- Errors
American Students Test Well in Problem Solving, but Trail Foreign Counterparts
Fifteen-year-olds in the United States scored above the average of those in the developed world on exams assessing problem-solving skills, but they trailed several countries in Asia and Europe as well as Canada, according to International standardized tests results released on Tuesday.
The American students who took the problem-solving tests in 2012, the first time they were administered, did better on these exams than on reading, math and Science tests, suggesting that students in the United States are better able to apply knowledge to real-life situations than perform straightforward academic tasks.
Still, students who took the problem-solving tests in countries including Singapore, South Korea, Japan, several provinces of China, Canada, Australia, Finland and Britain all outperformed American students.
"The good news is that problem solving still remains a relatively strong suit for American students," said Bob Wise, former governor of West Virginia and president of the Alliance for Excellent Education, a national policy and advocacy group focused on improving high schools. "The challenge is that a lot of other nations are now developing this and even moving ahead. So where we used to, in an earlier era, dominate in what we called the deeper learning skills — Creative thinking, criticai thinking and the ability to solve problems — in terms of producing the workers that are increasingly needed in this area, other nations are coming on strong and in some cases surpassing us ."
The new problem-solving exams were administered to a subset of 15-year-olds in 28 countries who sat for the Program for International Student Assessment, a set of tests every three years commonly known as PISA and given by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a Paris-based group whose members include the world's wealthiest nations. Almost 1,275 American students took the exams.
Critics of the rankings on International tests have tended to characterize the high performance of Asian countries in particular as demonstrating the rote learning of facts and formulas. But the problem-solving results showed that students in the highest-performing nations were also able to think flexibly. Even on Interactive tasks, the American students' strength, all the Asian countries that participated in this round of exams outperformed the United States.
"To understand how to navigate a complex problem and exercise abstract reasoning is actually a very strong point for the Asian countries," said Francesco Avvisati, an analyst on the PISA team at the O.E.C.D.
(Adapted from http://www.nytimes.com)
American Students Test Well in Problem Solving, but Trail Foreign Counterparts
Fifteen-year-olds in the United States scored above the average of those in the developed world on exams assessing problem-solving skills, but they trailed several countries in Asia and Europe as well as Canada, according to International standardized tests results released on Tuesday.
The American students who took the problem-solving tests in 2012, the first time they were administered, did better on these exams than on reading, math and Science tests, suggesting that students in the United States are better able to apply knowledge to real-life situations than perform straightforward academic tasks.
Still, students who took the problem-solving tests in countries including Singapore, South Korea, Japan, several provinces of China, Canada, Australia, Finland and Britain all outperformed American students.
"The good news is that problem solving still remains a relatively strong suit for American students," said Bob Wise, former governor of West Virginia and president of the Alliance for Excellent Education, a national policy and advocacy group focused on improving high schools. "The challenge is that a lot of other nations are now developing this and even moving ahead. So where we used to, in an earlier era, dominate in what we called the deeper learning skills — Creative thinking, criticai thinking and the ability to solve problems — in terms of producing the workers that are increasingly needed in this area, other nations are coming on strong and in some cases surpassing us ."
The new problem-solving exams were administered to a subset of 15-year-olds in 28 countries who sat for the Program for International Student Assessment, a set of tests every three years commonly known as PISA and given by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a Paris-based group whose members include the world's wealthiest nations. Almost 1,275 American students took the exams.
Critics of the rankings on International tests have tended to characterize the high performance of Asian countries in particular as demonstrating the rote learning of facts and formulas. But the problem-solving results showed that students in the highest-performing nations were also able to think flexibly. Even on Interactive tasks, the American students' strength, all the Asian countries that participated in this round of exams outperformed the United States.
"To understand how to navigate a complex problem and exercise abstract reasoning is actually a very strong point for the Asian countries," said Francesco Avvisati, an analyst on the PISA team at the O.E.C.D.
(Adapted from http://www.nytimes.com)
Say if the statements are T (true) or F (false) and choose the best alternative.
( ) American students outscored students of developed countries in all kinds of tests.
( ) Results suggest American students are good at problem-solving tests.
( ) American students have outstanding results in problem-solving tasks and in academic subjects like reading, math and science.
( ) American educational authorities are concerned about the performance of students from other countries.
( ) Asian students only perform better when it comes to memorizing
facts and formulas.