Questão caf62a0a-e6
Prova:FAG 2019
Disciplina:Inglês
Assunto:Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Taking into account the textual genre approach, we can say the text “Why a global language”? is

Why a global Language?


    ‘English is the global language.’ – A headline of this kind must have appeared in a thousand newspapers and magazines in recent years. ‘English Rules’ is an actual example, presenting to the world an uncomplicated scenario suggesting the universality of the language’s spread and the likelihood of its continuation. (…)
    These are the kinds of statement which seem so obvious that most people would give them hardly a second thought. Of course English is a global language, they would say. You hear it on television spoken by politicians from all over the world. Wherever you travel, you see English signs and advertisements. Whenever you enter a hotel or restaurant in a foreign city, they will understand English, and there will be an English menu. (…)
    But English is news. The language continues to make news daily in many countries. And the headline isn’t stating the obvious. For what does it mean, exactly? Is it saying that everyone in the world speaks English? This is certainly not true, as we shall see. Is it saying, then, that every country in the world recognizes English as an offcial language? This is not true either. So what does it mean to say that a language is a global language? Why is English the language which is usually cited in this connection? How did the situation arise? And could it change? Or is it the case that, once a language becomes a global language, it is there forever?
    These are fascinating questions to explore, whether your frst language is English or not. If English is your mother tongue, you may have mixed feelings about the way English is spreading around the world. You may feel pride, that your language is the one which has been so successful; but your pride may be tinged with concern, when you realize that people in other countries may not want to use the language in the same way that you do, and are changing it to suit themselves. We are all sensitive to the way other people use (it is often said, abuse) ‘our’ language. Deeply held feelings of ownership begin to be questioned. Indeed, if there is one predictable consequence of a language becoming a global language, it is that nobody owns it any more. Or rather, everyone who has learned it now owns it – ‘has a share in it’ might be more accurate – and has the right to use it in the way they want. This fact alone makes many people feel uncomfortable, even vaguely resentful. ‘Look what the Americans have done to English’ is a not uncommon comment found in the letter-columns of the British press.
    But similar comments can be heard in the USA when people encounter the sometimes striking variations in English which are emerging all over the world. And if English is not your mother tongue, you may still have mixed feelings about it. You may be strongly motivated to learn it, because you know it will put you in touch with more people than any other language; but at the same time you know it will take a great deal of effort to master it, and you may begrudge that effort. Having made progress, you will feel pride in your achievement, and savour the communicative power you have at your disposal, but may none the less feel that mother-tongue speakers of English have an unfair advantage over you. (…)
    These feelings are natural, and would arise whichever language emerged as a global language. They are feelings which give rise to fears, whether real or imaginary, and fears lead to conflict. Language is always in the news, and the nearer a language moves to becoming a global language, the more newsworthy it is. So how does a language come to achieve global status?
(Source: CRYSTAL, David. English as a global language. 2 ed. United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2003.

A
an abstract.
B
a political speech.
C
an academic writing.
D
a novel.
E
a comic strip.

Gabarito comentado

F
Fábio de AguiarMonitor do Qconcursos

Gabarito: C) uma escrita acadêmica

Tema central: A questão exige que o candidato reconheça o gênero textual do texto apresentado, diferenciando entre tipos como resumo, discurso político, romance, tira cômica e escrita acadêmica.

Explicação teórica: Em Inglês para concursos, a identificação de gêneros textuais é fundamental para compreender a intenção, a estrutura, o público-alvo e o contexto de produção do texto. Segundo a teoria de gêneros (Bakhtin), textos organizam-se conforme finalidades sociais, com sinais claros na linguagem, vocabulário e estilo.

Por que a alternativa C está correta?
O texto apresentado apresenta características evidentes de escrita acadêmica:

  • Linguagem formal e objetiva.
  • Citação de referências (livro, autor, editora).
  • Discussão reflexiva sobre o status do inglês, levantando hipóteses e perguntas investigativas típicas de trabalhos acadêmicos.
  • Estrutura lógica: introduz um tema, problematiza, discute e aponta possíveis consequências.

Esses pontos estão de acordo com autores clássicos como David Crystal e manuais como “English as a Global Language”, onde se exige clareza, análise fundamentada e referencial teórico.

Por que as demais estão incorretas?

  • A) Resumo: Um resumo sintetiza ideias de outro texto e não se aprofunda nem analisa.
  • B) Discurso político: Esse gênero busca persuadir e mobilizar para causas políticas, não se verifica aqui.
  • D) Romance: Não há elementos de narrativa nem personagens ou ficção.
  • E) Tira cômica: Ausência total de imagens ou humor; não é visual nem sátira.

Estratégia em provas: Atente-se a sinais como estrutura, vocabulário formal, referências e ausência de subjetividade ou elementos de ficção. Fuja de pegadinhas como confundir textos reflexivos com opinião ou resumir análises profundas como simples resumos.

Resumo: O texto é um exemplo claro de escrita acadêmica por sua objetividade, embasamento e estrutura lógica.

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