Questõessobre Adjetivos | Adjectives

1
1
Foram encontradas 100 questões
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UECE 2021 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Verbos frasais | Phrasal verbs, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Substantivos: definição e tipos | Nouns: definition and types, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

The underlined words in “extreme heatwaves” (line 13), “current pledges” (lines 14- 15), “polluting countries” (line 32) function respectively as

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/ 2021/sep/27/

A
ajective, noun, adjective.
B
noun, noun, adverb.
C
adverb, adjective, phrasal verb.
D
adjective, adjective, noun.
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SÃO CAMILO 2019 - Inglês - Grau dos adjetivos | Adjective degrees, Adjetivos | Adjectives

O trecho sublinhado em “the genre is as broad as the imagination” (3° parágrafo) expressa uma

Leia o texto para responder à questão.

The fantastic appeal of fantasy


The fantasy genre starts where science ends

     Few things can brighten up a dark morning in a Scottish seaside resort during an Atlantic storm. Yet while sheltering in a bookshop from the rain, I had a moment of sunny revelation. Stacked almost as high as my 11-year-old self were copies of The Lord of the Rings, with a cover illustration that promised mystery and magic. That chance discovery started a lifelong love of the fantasy genre1 , both as reader and writer. 
   The fantasy genre has had more and more success, but today we’re in the middle of an unprecedented fantasy boom. Sales continue to rise and it is now the biggest genre in publishing. The more rational the world gets, with super-science all around us, the more we demand the irrational in our fiction.
     Fantasy is not simply a case of swords2 and sorcery3 . Yes, there is that by the shelf. But the genre is as broad as the imagination. The genre starts where science ends.
    “In these modern times, where most of us sit at computers, fantasy books offer a chance to break out of mundane moments,” says Mark Newton, an editor with the genre. “People like to explore themes that go beyond the limited palette that literary fiction claims to offer.” 
     A search for the origins of fantasy will usually have academics muttering about Beowulf or Homer’s The Iliad, but they come from a time when all stories were fantasy: gods and monsters and supernatural artefacts with humanity caught in the middle. The first modern fantasy writer is usually considered to be William Morris, in the late 19th Century. But it was the early 20th Century where fantasy really started to gain status.
     Fantasy fiction has always been about visionary ideas. You can get artful words in plenty of literary fiction, but being able to see beyond the boundaries4 of the world around us — now that’s a special skill.
     I don’t write fantasy fiction simply to provide a trapdoor5 from the real world. For me, the genre is about the reality. But instead of coming up against it, fantasy maps the unconscious aspirations of our modern society through allegory in story- -forms as old as humanity. It’s about turning off the mobile phone and the computer and remembering who we are in the deepest parts of ourselves.

(Mark Chadbourn. www.telegraph.co.uk, 12.04.2008. Adaptado.)

1genre: gênero. Categoria distintiva de composição literária, como romance, poesia etc.
2sword: espada.
3sorcery: feitiçaria.
4boundary: fronteira.
5trapdoor: alçapão
A
suposição.
B
alternância.
C
comparação.
D
conclusão.
E
crítica.
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UNICENTRO 2016 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Prefixos e sufixos | Prefixes and suffixes, Pronome demonstrativo | Demonstrative pronoun, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Futuro simples | Simple future, Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension, Pronomes | Pronouns

Considerando o uso gramatical da língua no texto, é correto afirmar:


NOGUEIRA, Salvador. Translated by Marina Della Valle. Disponível em: < www1folha.uol.com.br/internacional/em/scienceandhealth/2016/03/ 1755511-russia-will-install-telescope-in-brazil..shtml>. Acesso em: 27 set. 2016.

A
A forma verbal “will set up” (l. 1) descreve uma ação contínua no futuro.
B
A palavra “probably” (l. 5) está funcionando como um adjetivo. 
C
O pronome pessoal “it” (l. 9) refere-se a Brazópolis (l. 9).
D
O adjetivo “atmospheric” (l. 25) é formado com o acréscimo de um sufixo. 
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UECE 2018 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Substantivos: definição e tipos | Nouns: definition and types

The –ING words “training” (line 40), “ruling” (line 46), and “flitting” (line122) function respectively as

A
verb, noun, adjective.
B
noun, adjective, verb.
C
noun, verb, noun.
D
adjective, noun, noun.
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UNICENTRO 2019 - Inglês - Vocabulário | Vocabulary, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Voz Ativa e Passiva | Passive and Active Voice, Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension, Uso dos adjetivos | Use of adjectives

Based on the language aspects in the text, it is correct to say that


Backpacs” (title) - a large bag carried on the back.

“strap” (l. 2) - a strip of leather, cloth or other flexible material.

“lugging” (l. 5) - carrying something with great effort. “prof” (l. 8) - professor.

“sprains” (l. 18) - injuries.

“strains” (l. 18) - severe demands on physical strengh.

A
“many” (l. 1) can be substituted by “a lot of” or “much”.
B
“But” (l. 4) gives an idea of conclusion.
C
“It wasn’t chic” (l. 11) the question tag to this sentence is “wasn’t it?”
D
“improperly” (l. 14) and “serious” (l. 15) are both adjectives.
E
“were treated” (l. 16) is in the passive voice.
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UNICENTRO 2019 - Inglês - Grau dos adjetivos | Adjective degrees, Adjetivos | Adjectives

The adjective that is in the superlative form is


Backpacs” (title) - a large bag carried on the back.

“strap” (l. 2) - a strip of leather, cloth or other flexible material.

“lugging” (l. 5) - carrying something with great effort. “prof” (l. 8) - professor.

“sprains” (l. 18) - injuries.

“strains” (l. 18) - severe demands on physical strengh.

A
“valuable” (l. 6).
B
“serious” (l. 15).
C
“heavy” (l. 24).
D
“padded” (l. 26).
E
“heaviest” (l. 31).
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UNICENTRO 2019 - Inglês - Adjetivos | Adjectives, Sinônimos | Synonyms, Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension, Oposto | Opposite

Concerning vocabulary, the alternative containing a wrong piece of information is

A
“old-fashioned” (l. 1) is the opposite of modern.
B
“Actually” (l. 5) is the same as In fact.
C
“Likewise” (l. 9) is synonymous with Similarly.
D
“amazing” (l. 31) is the opposite of surprising.
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UNICENTRO 2019 - Inglês - Adjetivos | Adjectives

The adjective that best describes the author’s attitude toward the Internet is

A
happy.
B
motivated.
C
serious.
D
sarcastic.
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UNICENTRO 2016 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Presente perfeito progressivo | Present perfect continuous, Caso genitivo | Genitive case, Verbos modais | Modal verbs, Grau dos adjetivos | Adjective degrees, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Presente perfeito | Present perfect, Presente simples | Simple present , Presente progressivo | Present continuous

Considerando o uso gramatical da língua no texto, é correto afirmar:


THE HONEYBEE has... Disponível em: <www.bbc.co.uk/news/scienceenvironment-34749846>. Acesso em: 21 set. 2016.

A
A forma verbal “had just emerged” (l. 9) refere-se ao tempo presente.
B
O modal em “may have been used” (l. 18-19) expressa possibilidade.
C
O ’s em “it”s (l. 24) expressa o genitivo de posse.
D
O adjetivo “the earliest” (l. 25) está no grau comparative de inferioridade.
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IF-RS 2014 - Inglês - Adjetivos | Adjectives, Substantivos: definição e tipos | Nouns: definition and types, Substantivos contáveis e incontáveis | Countable and uncountable, Uso dos adjetivos | Use of adjectives

Em distant cultures (linha 06), a classe gramatical das palavras, na ordem em que aparecem no sintagma, é a mesma que em

A
when cultures (linhas 01 e 02); sometimes cultures (linha 03).
B
exchanging foods (linha 03); culture swamps (linha 04).
C
they influence (linha 02); say critics (linhas 03 e 04).
D
long journeys (linha 06); cultural influences (linhas 07 e 08).
E
came slowly (linha 06); spread across (linha 08).
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Univille 2017 - Inglês - Adjetivos | Adjectives, Uso dos adjetivos | Use of adjectives

From the words in bold below, which is not adjective in the text:

TEXTO

Brazil has declared an end to its public health emergency over the Zika virus, 18 months after a surge in cases drew headlines around the world.

The mosquito-borne virus was not considered a major health threat until the 2015 outbreak revealed that Zika can lead to severe birth defects. One of those defects, microcephaly, causes babies to be born with skulls much smaller than expected.

Photos of babies with the defect spread panic around the globe as the virus was reported in dozens of countries. Many would-be travellers cancelled their trips to Zika-infected places. The concern spread even more widely when health officials said it could also be transmitted through sexual contact with an infected person.

The health scare came just as Brazil, the epicentre of the outbreak, was preparing to host the 2016 Olympics, fuelling concerns the Games could help spread the virus. One athlete, a Spanish wind surfer, said she got Zika while training in Brazil ahead of the Games.

In response to the outbreak, Brazil launched a mosquito-eradication campaign. The health ministry said those efforts have helped to dramatically reduce cases of Zika. Between January and mid-April, 95% fewer cases were recorded than during the same period last year. The incidence of microcephaly has fallen as well. 

The World Health Organization (WHO) lifted its own international emergency in November, even while saying the virus remained a threat. 

“The end of the emergency doesn’t mean the end of surveillance or assistance” to affected families, said Adeilson Cavalcante, the secretary for health surveillance at Brazil’s health ministry. “The health ministry and other organisations involved in this area will maintain a policy of fighting Zika, dengue and chikungunya.”

All three diseases are carried by the Aedes aegypti mosquito.

But the WHO has warned that Zika is “here to stay,” even when cases of it fall off, and that fighting the disease will be an ongoing battle.

(Fonte: Associated Press, Friday 12 May 2017 10.18 BST. Last modified on Friday 12 May 2017 22.00 BST) 

A
“much smaller
B
public health”
C
international emergency”
D
“more widely
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PUC - RS 2018 - Inglês - Adjetivos | Adjectives, Uso dos adjetivos | Use of adjectives

Select the alternative in which the two words have the same grammatical function of “reading” (line 03)

INSTRUÇÃO: Responder à questão com base no texto. 



Adapted from: https://www.newyorker.com/science/maria-konnikova/being-a-better-online-reader

A
reading (line 07) – following (line 43)
B
missing (line 14) – reading (line 20)
C
growing (line 20) – reading (line 28)
D
awakening (line 21) – reading (line 52)
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UECE 2019 - Inglês - Adjetivos | Adjectives

The underlined words in “learning experience”(line 26) and “can be isolating(line 38) are respectively an

A
adverb and a noun.
B
adjective and a noun.
C
adjective and an adjective.
D
adverb and an adjective.
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UDESC 2018 - Inglês - Pronome reflexivo | Reflexive Pronoun, Tipos de advérbios | Types of adverbs, Grau dos adjetivos | Adjective degrees, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions, Pronomes | Pronouns

According to the meaning of the text, the underlined words are consecutively:

The Invitation

It doesn’t interest me what you do for a living, I want to know what you ache for, and if you dare to dream of meeting your heart’s longing.

It doesn’t interest me how old you are. I want to know if you will risk looking like a fool for love, for your dreams, for the adventure of being alive.

It doesn’t interest me what planets are squaring with your moon. I want to know if you have touched the center of your own sorrow, if you have been opened by life’s betrayals or have become shriveled and closed from fear of further pain. I want to know if you can sit with pain, mine or your own, without moving to hide it, or fade it or fix it. I want to know if you can be with joy, mine or even your own; if you can dance with the wilderness and let the ecstasy fill you to the tips of your fingers and toes without cautioning us to be careful, be realistic, or to remember the limitations of being a human.

It doesn´t interest me if the story you´re telling me is true. I want to know if you can risk disappointing another to be true to yourself; if you can bear the accusation of betrayal and not betray your own soul. I want to know if you can be faithless and therefore be trustworthy. I want to know if you can see beauty even when it´s not pretty every day, and if you can source your life from its presence. I want to know if you can live with failure, yours and mine, and still stand on the edge of a lake and shout to the silver of the moon, “YES”.

It doesn´t interest me to know where you live or how much money you have. I want to know if you can get up after a night of grief and despair, weary and bruised to the bone, and do what needs to be done for the children. It doesn´t matter to me who you are, how you came to be here. I want to know if you will stand in the center of the fire with me and not shrink back. 

It doesn´t interest me where or what or with whom you have studied. I want to know what sustains you from the inside when all else falls away. I want to know if you can be alone with yourself; and if you truly like the company you keep in the empty moments.

(By Oriah Mountain Dreamer from the book THE INVITATION (c) 1999. Published by HarperONE, San Francisco. All rights reserved. Presented with permission of the author. www.oriah.org) (theunboundedspirit.com/start-living) Accessed on March 27th, 2018.
A
comparative, relative pronoun, possessive pronoun and adjective.
B
comparative, reflexive pronoun, possessive adjective and adverb.
C
superlative, objective pronoun, possessive adjective and adverb.
D
adjective, reflexive pronoun, possessive adjective and adjective.
E
superlative, relative pronoun, possessive pronoun and adjective.
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UECE 2013 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Prefixos e sufixos | Prefixes and suffixes, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Substantivos: definição e tipos | Nouns: definition and types

In the phrases “his condescending tone,” “contending that arguments,” and “the court’s proceedings,” the –ING words function, respectively, as:

TEXT

     BRASÍLIA — Brazil’s highest court has long viewed itself as a bastion of manners and formality. Justices call one another “Your Excellency,” dress in billowing robes and wrap each utterance in grandiloquence, as if little had changed from the era when marquises and dukes held sway from their vast plantations.
     In one televised feud, Mr. Barbosa questioned another justice about whether he would even be on the court had he not been appointed by his cousin, a former president impeached in 1992. With another justice, Mr. Barbosa rebuked him over what the chief justice considered his condescending tone, telling him he was not his “capanga,” a term describing a hired thug. 
      In one of his most scathing comments, Mr. Barbosa, the high court’s first and only black justice, took on the entire legal system of Brazil — where it is still remarkably rare for politicians to ever spend time in prison, even after being convicted of crimes — contending that the mentality of judges was “conservative, pro-status-quo and pro-impunity.”
     “I have a temperament that doesn’t adapt well to politics,” Mr. Barbosa, 58, said in a recent interview in his quarters here in the Supreme Federal Tribunal, a modernist landmark designed by the architect Oscar Niemeyer. “It’s because I speak my mind so much.” 
     His acknowledged lack of tact notwithstanding, he is the driving force behind a series of socially liberal and establishment-shaking rulings, turning Brazil’s highest court — and him in particular — into a newfound political power and the subject of popular fascination. 
   The court’s recent rulings include a unanimous decision upholding the University of Brasília’s admissions policies aimed at increasing the number of black and indigenous students, opening the way for one of the Western Hemisphere’s most sweeping affirmative action laws for higher education. 
     In another move, Mr. Barbosa used his sway as chief justice and president of the panel overseeing Brazil’s judiciary to effectively legalize same-sex marriage across the country. And in an anticorruption crusade, he is overseeing the precedent-setting trial of senior political figures in the governing Workers Party for their roles in a vast vote-buying scheme.
   Ascending to Brazil’s high court, much less pushing the institution to assert its independence, long seemed out of reach for Mr. Barbosa, the eldest of eight children raised in Paracatu, an impoverished city in Minas Gerais State, where his father worked as a bricklayer.  
    But his prominence — not just on the court, but in the streets as well — is so well established that masks with his face were sold for Carnival, amateur musicians have composed songs about his handling of the corruption trial and posted them on YouTube, and demonstrators during the huge street protests that shook the nation this year told pollsters that Mr. Barbosa was one of their top choices for president in next year’s elections.
     While the protests have subsided since their height in June, the political tumult they set off persists. The race for president, once considered a shoo-in for the incumbent, Dilma Rousseff, is now up in the air, with Mr. Barbosa — who is now so much in the public eye that gossip columnists are following his romance with a woman in her 20s — repeatedly saying he will not run. “I’m not a candidate for anything,” he says. 
     But the same public glare that has turned him into a celebrity has singed him as well. While he has won widespread admiration for his guidance of the high court, Mr. Barbosa, like almost every other prominent political figure in Brazil, has recently come under scrutiny. And for someone accustomed to criticizing the so-called supersalaries awarded to some members of Brazil’s legal system, the revelations have put Mr. Barbosa on the defensive. 
     One report in the Brazilian news media described how he received about $180,000 in payments for untaken leaves of absence during his 19 years as a public prosecutor. (Such payments are common in some areas of Brazil’s large public bureaucracy.) Another noted that he bought an apartment in Miami through a limited liability company, suggesting an effort to pay less taxes on the property. In statements, Mr. Barbosa contends that he has done nothing wrong. 
     In a country where a majority of people now define themselves as black or of mixed race — but where blacks remain remarkably rare in the highest echelons of political institutions and corporations — Mr. Barbosa’s trajectory and abrupt manner have elicited both widespread admiration and a fair amount of resistance. 
     As a teenager, Mr. Barbosa moved to the capital, Brasília, finding work as a janitor in a courtroom. Against the odds, he got into the University of Brasília, the only black student in its law program at the time. Wanting to see the world, he later won admission into Brazil’s diplomatic service, which promptly sent him to Helsinki, the Finnish capital on the shore of the Baltic Sea. 
     Sensing that he would not advance much in the diplomatic service, which he has called “one of the most discriminatory institutions of Brazil,” Mr. Barbosa opted for a career as a prosecutor. He alternated between legal investigations in Brazil and studies abroad, gaining fluency in English, French and German, and earning a doctorate in law at Pantheon-Assas University in Paris. 
   Fascinated by the legal systems of other countries, Mr. Barbosa wrote a book on affirmative action in the United States. He still voices his admiration for figures like Thurgood Marshall, the first black Supreme Court justice in the United States, and William J. Brennan Jr., who for years embodied the court’s liberal vision, clearly drawing inspiration from them as he pushed Brazil’s high court toward socially liberal rulings.
    Still, no decision has thrust Mr. Barbosa into Brazil’s public imagination as much as his handling of the trial of political operatives, legislators and bankers found guilty in a labyrinthine corruption scandal called the mensalão, or big monthly allowance, after the regular payments made to lawmakers in exchange for their votes. 
    Last November, at Mr. Barbosa’s urging, the high court sentenced some of the most powerful figures in the governing Workers Party to years in prison for their crimes in the scheme, including bribery and unlawful conspiracy, jolting a political system in which impunity for politicians has been the norm.  
     Now the mensalão trial is entering what could be its final phases, and Mr. Barbosa has at times been visibly exasperated that defendants who have already been found guilty and sentenced have managed to avoid hard jail time. He has clashed with other justices over their consideration of a rare legal procedure in which appeals over close votes at the high court are examined. 
     Losing his patience with one prominent justice, Ricardo Lewandowski, who tried to absolve some defendants of certain crimes, Mr. Barbosa publicly accused him this month of “chicanery” by using legalese to prop up certain positions. An outcry ensued among some who could not stomach Mr. Barbosa’s talking to a fellow justice like that. “Who does Justice Joaquim Barbosa think he is?” asked Ricardo Noblat, a columnist for the newspaper O Globo, questioning whether Mr. Barbosa was qualified to preside over the court. “What powers does he think he has just because he’s sitting in the chair of the chief justice of the Supreme Federal Tribunal?” 
      Mr. Barbosa did not apologize. In the interview, he said some tension was necessary for the court to function properly. “It was always like this,” he said, contending that arguments are now just easier to see because the court’s proceedings are televised. 
     Linking the court’s work to the recent wave of protests, he explained that he strongly disagreed with the violence of some demonstrators, but he also said he believed that the street movements were “a sign of democracy’s exuberance.” 
     “People don’t want to passively stand by and observe these arrangements of the elite, which were always the Brazilian tradition,” he said. 
A
verb, verb, verb.
B
adjective, verb, noun.
C
verb, noun, adjective.
D
adjective, noun, noun.
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FAINOR 2019 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Substantivos: definição e tipos | Nouns: definition and types

Identifique a classe gramatical das palavras que estão em negrito no texto:

I- “factory”   II- “employs”   III- “watches”   IV- “profit”   V- “revolutionary”


Marque a alternativa que possui a seqüência correta das respostas:


A
verbo – verbo – adjetivo – substantivo – adjetivo
B
substantivo – verbo – substantivo – substantivo – adjetivo
C
adjetivo – substantivo – verbo – substantivo – substantivo
D
verbo – substantivo – verbo – substantivo – verbo
E
substantivo – verbo – adjetivo – substantivo – substantivo
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UFGD 2011 - Inglês - Vocabulário | Vocabulary, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Sinônimos | Synonyms, Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Which is the best option to replace the adjective „akin to‟ in the article?

Read the New York Times article and answer question.

Eating Disorders a New Front in Insurance Fight
By ANDREW POLLACK
Published: October 13, 2011

     People with eating disorders like anorexia have opened up a new battleground in the insurance wars, testing the boundaries of laws mandating equivalent coverage for mental illnesses. 
     Through claims and court cases, those with severe cases of anorexia or bulimia are fighting insurers to pay for stays in residential treatment centers, arguing that the centers offer around-the-clock monitoring so that patients do not forgo eating or purge their meals.
     But in the last few years, some insurance companies have re-emphasized that they do not cover residential treatment for eating disorders or other mental or emotional conditions. The insurers consider residential treatments not only costly — sometimes reaching more than $1,000 a day — but unproven and more akin to education than to medicine. Even some doctors who treat eating disorders concede there are few studies proving that residential care is effective, although they believe it has value. 

(Disponível em: <http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/14/business/ruling-offers-hope-to-eating-disorder-sufferers.html?hp>. Acesso em: 5 out. 2011).
A
closely different from.
B
deep and far away.
C
controversial to.
D
closely similar to.
E
problematic.
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UNIOESTE 2019 - Inglês - Grau dos adjetivos | Adjective degrees, Adjetivos | Adjectives

Qual alternativa abaixo contém um exemplo do uso do superlativo?

Leia o texto e responda à questão.


Adapted from: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-7399879/European-capital-cities-dominate-list-worlds-FASTEST-public-transport-systems.html Last access: August, 29, 2019.

A
“Public transport is increasingly becoming one of the most crucial forms of transport (...)”.
B
“Now, researchers at the Polytechnic University of Turin have ranked the world’s largest networks (...)”.
C
“(...) to come up with engaging and meaningful visualisations (...)”.
D
“(...) the acceleration of urban growth has led to an unprecedented level of urban interactions (...)”.
E
“Their average speed was found to be 6.2 and 5.8 km/h (...)”.
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UEFS 2011 - Inglês - Grau dos adjetivos | Adjective degrees, Adjetivos | Adjectives

The word “better” (l. 7) is the irregular comparative degree of


A
ill.
B
bad.
C
well
D
good.
E
badly.
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UEFS 2011 - Inglês - Adjetivos | Adjectives, Oposto | Opposite

The only alternative without a pair of opposites is



LOBEL, Mark. Disponível em: <www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/language/wordsinthenews/2011/04/110411_witn_floating_debris_ page.shtml>. Acesso em: 4 jun. 2010.
A
“massive” (l. 1) — small.
B
“most” (l. 6) — least.
C
“closely” (l. 7) — carefully.
D
“later” (l. 8) — earlier.
E
“huge” (l. 11) — tiny.