MENU
Instalar nosso app
Estudos
Flashcards
novo
Planos de Estudos
Questões
Simulados
Concursos
Rankings Pós-Prova
Ranking Global onv
novo
Concursos Passados
Ordenar Resultados
Informações
Organizadoras
Órgãos
Cargos
Disciplinas
Estatísticas
Nosso Desempenho
Estatísticas das Organizadoras
Estatísticas de Cursos
Planos e preços
Ajuda
Reviews
olhonavaga med
Modo Escuro
Ativar notificações
Questões de concursos
Resolva quantas desejar, é ilimitado!
Filtros Inteligentes
A lista de dados de cada filtro é atualizada de acordo com os filtros previamente inseridos.
Somente são apresentados na lista de cada um, dados existentes na combinação de filtros já escolhida.
Concursos
OAB
ENEM
Vestibular
Incluir
Excluir
Somente anuladas
Excluir anuladas
Somente desatualizadas
Excluir desatualizadas
Com anotações
Sem anotações
Respondidas
Não respondidas
Acertadas
Erradas
Limpar
Filtrar
Participar do simulado
Meus filtros
Meus cadernos
Minhas estatísticas
59 questões
F
P
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
N
E
Linhas por página
5
15
30
#381744
•
prova:
47306
•
questão 1
simulado
Português
•
Interpretação de Textos
|
Significação Contextual de Palavras e Expressões. Sinônimos e Antônimos.
2010
•
FCC
•
METRÔ-SP
•
Analista - Administração
Exibir texto associado
Estradas e viajantes
A linguagem nossa de cada dia pode ser altamente expressiva. Não sei até quando sobreviverão expressões, ditados, fórmulas proverbiais, modos de dizer que atravessaram o tempo falando as coisas de um jeito muito especial, gostoso, sugestivo. Acabarão por cair todas em desuso numa época como a nossa, cheia de pressa e sem nenhuma paciência, ou apenas se renovarão?
Algumas expressões são tão fortes que resistem aos séculos. Haverá alguma língua que não estabeleça formas de comparação entre vida e viagem, vida e caminho, vida e estrada? O grande Dante já começava a Divina Comédia com “No meio do caminho de nossa vida...”. Se a vida é uma viagem, a
grande viagem só pode ser... a morte, fim do nosso caminho. “Ela partiu", “Ele se foi”, dizemos. E assim vamos seguindo...
Quando menino, ouvia com estranheza a frase “Cuidado, tem boi na linha”. Como não havia linha de trem nem boi por perto, e as pessoas olhavam disfarçadamente para mim, comecei a desconfiar, mas sem compreender, que o boi era eu; mas como assim? Mais tarde vim a entender a tradução completa e prosaica: “suspendamos a conversa, porque há alguém que não deve ouvi-la”. Uma outra expressão pitoresca, que eu já entendia, era “calça de pular brejo” ou “calça de atravessar rio”, no caso de pernas crescidas ou calças encolhidas, tudo constatado antes de pegar algum caminho.
Já adulto, vim a dar com o termo “passagem”, no sentido fúnebre. “Passou desta para melhor”. Situação difícil: “estar numa encruzilhada”. Fim de vida penoso? “Também, já está subindo a ladeira dos oitenta...” São incontáveis os exemplos, é uma retórica inteira dedicada a imagens como essas. Obviamente, os poetas, especialistas em imagens, se encarregam de multiplicá-las. “Tinha uma pedra no meio do caminho”, queixou-se uma vez, e para sempre, o poeta Carlos Drummond de Andrade, fornecendo-nos um símbolo essencial para todo e qualquer obstáculo que um caminhante fatalmente enfrenta na estrada da vida, neste mundo velho sem porteira...
(Peregrino Solerte, inédito)
Atente para as seguintes afirmações:
I. No 1
o
parágrafo, expressa-se a convicção de que os modos de dizer mais expressivos não sobreviverão nos tempos modernos, por serem avaliados como ineficazes nos processos de comunicação.
II.No 3
o
parágrafo, a impossibilidade de o menino compreender a frase ouvida aos adultos deveu-se ao fato de estar traduzida em linguagem prosaica.
III. No 4
o
parágrafo, reconhece-se nos poetas a capacidade de enriquecimento expressivo da linguagem, especialistas que são na criação de imagens.
Em relação ao texto, está correto APENAS o que se afirma em
A
I.
B
II.
C
III.
D
I e II
E
II e III.
necessário selecionar uma resposta
muito bom! resposta correta!
resposta errada :(
verificar resposta correta
Dificuldade em lembrar o conteúdo? Surpreenda-se com os Flashcards Inteligentes!
Responder
Comentários
Estatísticas
Anotações
Caderno
Notificar erro
#381704
•
prova:
47306
•
questão 2
simulado
Inglês
•
Tradução (translation)
2010
•
FCC
•
METRÔ-SP
•
Analista - Administração
Exibir texto associado
Subways
Posted on Friday March 27th, 2009 by Jebediah Reed
To give some sense of the
pace
of public works
construction in China, the city of Guangzhou is planning to open
83 miles of new subway lines by the end of next year.
Meanwhile, New York ? a city of about the same size ? has
been playing around with the 1.7-mile Second Avenue line for
decades now. China also builds subways rather cheaply ? $100
million per mile versus $ 2.4 billion per mile in the Big Apple.
Not surprisingly, projects
there
are more aggressive in all
respects: there are 60 tunnel boring machines operating in
Guangzhou, while only one is slated for the Second Avenue
project; workers put in five 12-hour shifts a week (and if they
don't like it, they can go pound glacial till); and seizing property
is
a breeze
.
An article in the Business section of today's NY Times
(Clash of Subways and Car Culture in Chinese Cities by Keith
Bradsher)
[VERB]
a smart look at the forces at play as China
goes on a transit infrastructure spending spree while it
simultaneously becomes evermore sprawling and car-centric.
Here's one interesting passage,
[CONJUNCTION]
the
story is worth reading in its entirety:
Western mass transit experts applaud China for investing
billions in systems that will put less stress on the environment
and on cities. But they warn that other Chinese policies, like
allowing real estate developers to build sprawling new suburbs,
undermine the benefits of the mass transit boom.
Mr. Chan Shao Zhang , a 67-year-old engineer in charge
of the works in Guangzhou, defended Guangzhou's combination
of cars and subways, saying that the city built a subway line to a new Toyota assembly plant to help employees and suppliers
reach it.
Subways have been most competitive in cities like New
York that have high prices for parking, and tolls for bridges and
tunnels, discouraging car use. Few Chinese cities have been
willing to follow suit, other than Shanghai, which charges a fee of
several thousand dollars for each license plate.
The cost and physical limitations of subways have
discouraged most cities from building new ones. For instance,
only Tokyo has a subway system that carries more people than
its buses. The buses are cheaper and able to serve far more
streets but move more slowly, pollute more and contribute to
traffic congestion.
China has reason to worry. It surpassed the United
States in total vehicle sales for the first time in January, although
the United States remained slightly ahead in car sales. But in
February, China overtook the United States in both, in part
because the global downturn has hurt auto sales much more in
the United States than in China.
There are many countervaling forces ..X.. China has
passed its own stimulus package and the government is eager
to put people to work, create economic activity, and build
modern infrastructure. The Guangzhou project is part of major
national transit buildout. But the nation's cities are also sprawling
beasts, and in that sense, more suited to cars than trains. Not
shockingly, many Chinese prefer the former.
(Adapted from http://www.infrastructurist.com/2009/03/27/-
building-a-subway-is-96-percent-cheaper-in-china/)
The correct translation for
pace
, as it is used in the 1
st
paragraph of the text, is
A
custo.
B
ritmo.
C
lugar.
D
espaço.
E
eficiência.
necessário selecionar uma resposta
muito bom! resposta correta!
resposta errada :(
verificar resposta correta
Dificuldade em lembrar o conteúdo? Surpreenda-se com os Flashcards Inteligentes!
Responder
Comentários
Estatísticas
Anotações
Caderno
Notificar erro
#381705
•
prova:
47306
•
questão 3
simulado
Inglês
•
Advérbios e Conjunções (adverbs And Conjunctions)
|
Advérbios De: Lugar, Modo, Tempo e Freqüência (adverbs Of: Place, Manner, Time And Frequency)
2010
•
FCC
•
METRÔ-SP
•
Analista - Administração
Exibir texto associado
Subways
Posted on Friday March 27th, 2009 by Jebediah Reed
To give some sense of the
pace
of public works
construction in China, the city of Guangzhou is planning to open
83 miles of new subway lines by the end of next year.
Meanwhile, New York ? a city of about the same size ? has
been playing around with the 1.7-mile Second Avenue line for
decades now. China also builds subways rather cheaply ? $100
million per mile versus $ 2.4 billion per mile in the Big Apple.
Not surprisingly, projects
there
are more aggressive in all
respects: there are 60 tunnel boring machines operating in
Guangzhou, while only one is slated for the Second Avenue
project; workers put in five 12-hour shifts a week (and if they
don't like it, they can go pound glacial till); and seizing property
is
a breeze
.
An article in the Business section of today's NY Times
(Clash of Subways and Car Culture in Chinese Cities by Keith
Bradsher)
[VERB]
a smart look at the forces at play as China
goes on a transit infrastructure spending spree while it
simultaneously becomes evermore sprawling and car-centric.
Here's one interesting passage,
[CONJUNCTION]
the
story is worth reading in its entirety:
Western mass transit experts applaud China for investing
billions in systems that will put less stress on the environment
and on cities. But they warn that other Chinese policies, like
allowing real estate developers to build sprawling new suburbs,
undermine the benefits of the mass transit boom.
Mr. Chan Shao Zhang , a 67-year-old engineer in charge
of the works in Guangzhou, defended Guangzhou's combination
of cars and subways, saying that the city built a subway line to a new Toyota assembly plant to help employees and suppliers
reach it.
Subways have been most competitive in cities like New
York that have high prices for parking, and tolls for bridges and
tunnels, discouraging car use. Few Chinese cities have been
willing to follow suit, other than Shanghai, which charges a fee of
several thousand dollars for each license plate.
The cost and physical limitations of subways have
discouraged most cities from building new ones. For instance,
only Tokyo has a subway system that carries more people than
its buses. The buses are cheaper and able to serve far more
streets but move more slowly, pollute more and contribute to
traffic congestion.
China has reason to worry. It surpassed the United
States in total vehicle sales for the first time in January, although
the United States remained slightly ahead in car sales. But in
February, China overtook the United States in both, in part
because the global downturn has hurt auto sales much more in
the United States than in China.
There are many countervaling forces ..X.. China has
passed its own stimulus package and the government is eager
to put people to work, create economic activity, and build
modern infrastructure. The Guangzhou project is part of major
national transit buildout. But the nation's cities are also sprawling
beasts, and in that sense, more suited to cars than trains. Not
shockingly, many Chinese prefer the former.
(Adapted from http://www.infrastructurist.com/2009/03/27/-
building-a-subway-is-96-percent-cheaper-in-china/)
The underlined word
there
, in the 2
nd
paragraph, refers to
A
New York.
B
China.
C
Second Ave.
D
Guangzhou.
E
Big Apple.
necessário selecionar uma resposta
muito bom! resposta correta!
resposta errada :(
verificar resposta correta
Dificuldade em lembrar o conteúdo? Surpreenda-se com os Flashcards Inteligentes!
Responder
Comentários
Estatísticas
Anotações
Caderno
Notificar erro
#381748
•
prova:
47306
•
questão 4
simulado
Inglês
2010
•
FCC
•
METRÔ-SP
•
Analista - Administração
Exibir texto associado
Subways
Posted on Friday March 27th, 2009 by Jebediah Reed
To give some sense of the
pace
of public works construction in China, the city of Guangzhou is planning to open 83 miles of new subway lines by the end of next year. Meanwhile, New York - a city of about the same size - has been playing around with the 1.7-mile Second Avenue line for
decades now. China also builds subways rather cheaply - $100 million per mile versus $ 2.4 billion per mile in the Big Apple.
Not surprisingly, projects
there
are more aggressive in all respects: there are 60 tunnel boring machines operating in Guangzhou, while only one is slated for the Second Avenue project;workers put in five 12-hour shifts a week (and if they don’t like it, they can go pound glacial till); and seizing property is
a breeze
.
An article in the Business section of today’s NY Times (Clash of Subways and Car Culture in Chinese Cities by Keith Bradsher)
[VERB]
a smart look at the forces at play as China goes on a transit infrastructure spending spree while it simultaneously becomes evermore sprawling and car-centric.
Here’s one interesting passage,
[CONJUNCTION]
the story is worth reading in its entirety:
Western mass transit experts applaud China for investing billions in systems that will put less stress on the environment and on cities. But they warn that other Chinese policies, like allowing real estate developers to build sprawling new suburbs, undermine the benefits of the mass transit boom.
Mr. Chan Shao Zhang , a 67-year-old engineer in charge of the works in Guangzhou, defended Guangzhou’s combination of cars and subways, saying that the city built a subway line to a new Toyota assembly plant to help employees and suppliers reach it.
Subways have been most competitive in cities like New York that have high prices for parking, and tolls for bridges and tunnels, discouraging car use. Few Chinese cities have been willing to follow suit, other than Shanghai, which charges a fee of several thousand dollars for each license plate.
The cost and physical limitations of subways have discouraged most cities from building new ones. For instance, only Tokyo has a subway system that carries more people than its buses. The buses are cheaper and able to serve far more streets but move more slowly, pollute more and contribute to traffic congestion.
China has reason to worry. It surpassed the United States in total vehicle sales for the first time in January, although the United States remained slightly ahead in car sales. But in February, China overtook the United States in both, in part because the global downturn has hurt auto sales much more in the United States than in China.
There are many countervaling forces
. China has passed its own stimulus package and the government is eager to put people to work, create economic activity, and build modern infrastructure. The Guangzhou project is part of major national transit buildout. But the nation’s cities are also sprawling beasts, and in that sense, more suited to cars than trains. Not shockingly, many Chinese prefer the former.
(Adapted from http://www.infrastructurist.com/2009/03/27/-building-a-subway-is-96-percent-cheaper-in-china/)
A synonym for
a breeze
, as it is used in the 2
nd
paragraph of the text, is
A
cheap.
B
legal.
C
easy.
D
expensive.
E
difficult.
necessário selecionar uma resposta
muito bom! resposta correta!
resposta errada :(
verificar resposta correta
Dificuldade em lembrar o conteúdo? Surpreenda-se com os Flashcards Inteligentes!
Responder
Comentários
Estatísticas
Anotações
Caderno
Notificar erro
#381707
•
prova:
47306
•
questão 5
simulado
Inglês
•
Vocabulário (vocabulary)
|
Verbos (verbs)
2010
•
FCC
•
METRÔ-SP
•
Analista - Administração
Exibir texto associado
Subways
Posted on Friday March 27th, 2009 by Jebediah Reed
To give some sense of the
pace
of public works
construction in China, the city of Guangzhou is planning to open
83 miles of new subway lines by the end of next year.
Meanwhile, New York ? a city of about the same size ? has
been playing around with the 1.7-mile Second Avenue line for
decades now. China also builds subways rather cheaply ? $100
million per mile versus $ 2.4 billion per mile in the Big Apple.
Not surprisingly, projects
there
are more aggressive in all
respects: there are 60 tunnel boring machines operating in
Guangzhou, while only one is slated for the Second Avenue
project; workers put in five 12-hour shifts a week (and if they
don't like it, they can go pound glacial till); and seizing property
is
a breeze
.
An article in the Business section of today's NY Times
(Clash of Subways and Car Culture in Chinese Cities by Keith
Bradsher)
[VERB]
a smart look at the forces at play as China
goes on a transit infrastructure spending spree while it
simultaneously becomes evermore sprawling and car-centric.
Here's one interesting passage,
[CONJUNCTION]
the
story is worth reading in its entirety:
Western mass transit experts applaud China for investing
billions in systems that will put less stress on the environment
and on cities. But they warn that other Chinese policies, like
allowing real estate developers to build sprawling new suburbs,
undermine the benefits of the mass transit boom.
Mr. Chan Shao Zhang , a 67-year-old engineer in charge
of the works in Guangzhou, defended Guangzhou's combination
of cars and subways, saying that the city built a subway line to a new Toyota assembly plant to help employees and suppliers
reach it.
Subways have been most competitive in cities like New
York that have high prices for parking, and tolls for bridges and
tunnels, discouraging car use. Few Chinese cities have been
willing to follow suit, other than Shanghai, which charges a fee of
several thousand dollars for each license plate.
The cost and physical limitations of subways have
discouraged most cities from building new ones. For instance,
only Tokyo has a subway system that carries more people than
its buses. The buses are cheaper and able to serve far more
streets but move more slowly, pollute more and contribute to
traffic congestion.
China has reason to worry. It surpassed the United
States in total vehicle sales for the first time in January, although
the United States remained slightly ahead in car sales. But in
February, China overtook the United States in both, in part
because the global downturn has hurt auto sales much more in
the United States than in China.
There are many countervaling forces ..X.. China has
passed its own stimulus package and the government is eager
to put people to work, create economic activity, and build
modern infrastructure. The Guangzhou project is part of major
national transit buildout. But the nation's cities are also sprawling
beasts, and in that sense, more suited to cars than trains. Not
shockingly, many Chinese prefer the former.
(Adapted from http://www.infrastructurist.com/2009/03/27/-
building-a-subway-is-96-percent-cheaper-in-china/)
The correct word that replaces
[VERB]
in the text is
A
does.
B
gives.
C
makes.
D
turns.
E
takes.
necessário selecionar uma resposta
muito bom! resposta correta!
resposta errada :(
verificar resposta correta
Dificuldade em lembrar o conteúdo? Surpreenda-se com os Flashcards Inteligentes!
Responder
Comentários
Estatísticas
Anotações
Caderno
Notificar erro
59 questões
F
P
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
N
E
Linhas por página
5
15
30
Compartilhe esse conteúdo!
https://olhonavaga.com.br/questoes/questoes?tc=1&pr=47306
Minhas anotações para a questão #
Apagar
Data
Anotação
Nenhuma anotação inserida
Nova anotação:
Salvar
Suas respostas para a questão #
Data
Alternativa
Acertou?
Nenhuma anotação inserida
Meus filtros
Salvar novo filtro com as configurações atuais:
Salvar
Carregar filtros salvos:
Apagar
Filtro
Nenhum filtro salvo
Inserir a questão # em um caderno
Novo caderno:
Salvar e inserir
Escolha um caderno para filtrar as questões
Apagar
Nome
Nenhum caderno foi criado
Solicitar alteração de dados na questão #
As respostas apresentadas nas questões estão de acordo com o gabarito divulgado pela banca examinadora.
Não cabe aqui julgar se a banca examinadora está correta ou não
, para isso
utilize os comentários
dessa questão.
Gabarito Errado
Cancelar
Enviar
Outro problema
Para julgamento da elaboração da questão ou das respostas, utilize a seção de comentários da questão
Detalhes das correções necessárias (erro referente ao cadastro da questão no site):
Cancelar
Enviar
Estudos
Flashcards
Planos de Estudos
Questões
Simulados
Concursos
Rankings Pós-Prova
Ranking Global onv
Concursos Passados
Ordenar Resultados
Informações
Organizadoras
Órgãos
Cargos
Disciplinas
Estatísticas
Nosso Desempenho
Estatísticas das Organizadoras
Estatísticas de Cursos
Mais
Planos e preços
Sobre Nós
Ajuda
Reviews
olhonavaga med
Estudantes
4.534.668
Rankings Pós-Prova
61.116
Flashcards
476.766
Planos de Estudos
17.874
Questões
1.435.192
Simulados
26.003
Termos de Uso e Política de Privacidade
© copyright - todos os direitos reservados | olhonavaga.com.br
Ative nossas notificações para receber atualizações sobre seus pagamentos, estatísticas das suas ferramentas de estudo e promoções!
Fique ligado em cada atualização!
Ativar
Como o seu navegador já bloqueou as notificações do nosso portal, você deverá acessar nosso site utilizando seu navegador, clicar no ícone de cadeado ao lado do nosso endereço URL e habilitar manualmente o envio de notificações.
Instale nosso APP para receber atualizações sobre seus pagamentos, estatísticas das suas ferramentas de estudo e promoções!
Fique ligado em cada atualização!
Instalar APP
Atendimento
Olá! Sou o assistente de ajuda do olhonavaga. Descreva sua dúvida em detalhes para eu tentar te ajudar rapidamente.
Caracteres: 0 (min: 20, max: 500)
Enviar