Questõessobre Advérbios

1
1
Foram encontradas 115 questões
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CEDERJ 2015 - Inglês - Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

    In the second paragraph, in the sentence “we give it to seem wise, when in fact it's nonsense", the conjunction “when" introduces an idea of

Why don’t we take our own advice?
Oliver Burkeman

“Why is it so hard to take your own advice?” the psychology writer Melissa Dahl asked in a New York magazine essay some months ago, and the question’s been bugging me ever since. I have the arrogance to imagine that if you followed some of the suggestions made each week in this column, you might be a little happier or more productive, with a little less relationship drama, a little more inner calm. (From my email inbox, I know this happens at least occasionally.) But were you to infer from this that I follow such advice flawlessly myself, you’d be mistaken. When friends mention their difficulties with partners or bosses, Dahl wrote, she always tells them to talk to the person involved. Just say something! “And probably, this is good advice,” she mused. “I wouldn’t know, as it’s something I rarely do myself.” I can understand. I suspect most of us can. As the old wisecrack has it: “Take my advice – I’m not using it.”
The cynical take on this is that we ignore our own advice because it’s rubbish: we give it to seem wise, when in fact it’s nonsense. (All advice to “try harder” or “snap out of it” or “look on the bright side” fall into this category: if the recipient could do so, he or she already would have, without your so-called help.)
But a more interesting notion is that the advice is often good – yet something prevents us applying it to ourselves. One such obstacle is simply too much information: inside our own heads, we have access to all manner of details, making us believe that this relationship problem, this job dilemma, is special, so the advice doesn’t apply. Dahl cites work by the psychologist Dan Ariely, showing that when a friend gets a serious medical diagnosis, most people would urge them to get a second opinion. But were it to happen to themselves, they’d be more likely not to do so, for fear of offending their doctor. The fear of offence is something you’d think of only in your own case – and it’s totally unhelpful.
But there’s another big reason I don’t follow my own advice: the huge gulf between grasping something intellectually and really feeling it in your bones. For example, it was years ago that I first encountered the insight that anxiety and insecurity aren’t reduced by trying to exert more control over the world; in fact, that usually makes them worse. I know this. But apparently I have to keep learning it, over and over. Its correctness isn’t sufficient for it to get into my brain once and for all; that takes repeated experience. As a result, I continue to “suddenly realise” things I already wrote an entire book about.
If nothing else, this should be a caution against getting too frustrated with that one friend of yours who keeps getting into the same kind of pickle, time and again, deaf to the obviously good advice that everyone keeps offering. You know the type. We’ve all got a friend like that. The 
scary thought is that, for some of your friends, it’s probably you.

Adapted from http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2015/sep/11/ taking-your-own-advice-oliver-burkeman. Accessed on: 22 out. 2015.

Glossary
advice: conselho; to bug: incomodar; to infer: concluir; flawlessly: perfeitamente; to muse: meditar; wisecrack: espertinho; cynical: cínico, pessimista; rubbish: besteira; to urge: insistir; gulf: distância; exert: exercer; pickle: encrenca
A
opposition.
B
condition.
C
duration.
D
consequence.
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UCS 2015 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension, Palavras conectivas | Connective words, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

Assinale a alternativa cujos elementos melhor substituem, respectivamente, os termos sublinhados nos segmentos a seguir.

I Despite the fact that Victoria and Albert often favoured artists from Germany (linha 30).

II Scottish authors Robert Louis Stevenson and Sir Walter Scott also owe Victoria a debt – in fact, the royal couple’s love of Scotland (linhas 42 e 43).

INSTRUÇÃO: A questão refere-se ao texto abaixo.

                      Victoria and Albert: how a royal love changed culture

                                                                                                           By Lucinda Hawksley 

 


Disponível em: <http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/20150623-victoria-albert-cultural-impact>.

Acesso em: 3 ago. 15. (Parcial e adaptado.)

A
While – because of it.
B
Although – in reality.
C
Even if – besides.
D
Though – so.
E
Yet – in truth.
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UNESP 2015 - Inglês - Sinônimos | Synonyms, Palavras conectivas | Connective words, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

No trecho final do primeiro parágrafo “through the introduction of resistance to plant diseases”, o termo em destaque equivale, em português, a

                                    Genetically modified foods

      Genetically modified (GM) foods are foods derived from organisms whose genetic material (DNA) has been modified in a way that does not occur naturally, e.g. through the introduction of a gene from a different organism. Currently available GM foods stem mostly from plants, but in the future foods derived from GM microorganisms or GM animals are likely to be introduced on the market. Most existing genetically modified crops have been developed to improve yield, through the introduction of resistance to plant diseases or of increased tolerance of herbicides.

      In the future, genetic modification could be aimed at altering the nutrient content of food, reducing its allergenic potential, or improving the efficiency of food production systems. All GM foods should be assessed before being allowed on the market. FAO/WHO Codex guidelines exist for risk analysis of GM food.

                                                                                                                                    (www.who.int)

A
embora.
B
por meio de.
C
durante.
D
dentre.
E
também.
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CEDERJ 2015 - Inglês - Palavras conectivas | Connective words, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

O conector “on the other hand", na quinta linha do último parágrafo, estabelece uma relação de:

What Your Tweets Say About You
By Maria Konnikov

 

How much can your tweets reveal about you? A lot! - would be the answer of psychologists James Pennebaker e Cindy Chung, at the University of Texas, who study how language relates to well-being and personality. One of Pennebaker’s most famous projects is a computer program called Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (L.I.W.C.), which looks at the words we use, and in what frequency and context, and uses this information to study our psychological states and various aspects of our personality.
Since the creation of the L.I.W.C., in 1993, studies utilizing the program have suggested a close connection between our language, our state of mind, and our behavior. They have shown, for instance, that a person’s word choices can reveal her place in a social or professional hierarchy; and that the use of different filler words (“I mean”; “You know”) can suggest whether a speaker is male or female, younger or older, and more or less conscientious. “The words we use in natural language reflect our thoughts and feelings in often unpredictable ways,” Pennebaker and Cindy Chung have written.
The psychologist Johannes Eichstaedt and his colleagues analyzed eight hundred and twenty-six million tweets across fourteen hundred American counties(1)Then, using lists of words that can be reliably associated with positive and negative emotions, they gave each county an emotional profile. Finally, they asked a simple question: Could those profiles help determine which counties were likely to have more deaths from heart disease?
The answer was yes. Counties where residents’ tweets included words related to hostility, aggression, hate, and, fatigue — words such as “jealous,” and “bored”— had significantly higher rates of heart-related deaths. On the other hand, where people’s tweets reflected more positive emotions and engagement, heart disease was less common. The tweet-based model even had more predictive power than other models based on traditional demographic, socioeconomic, and health-risk factors.

(1) Um condado (county/counties) ou província é um aglomerado de cidades, não tão grande quanto um estado.

From: http://www.newyorker.com/science/maria-konnikova/can-tweets-predict-heart-disease

GLOSSARY: conscientious: consciencioso/cuidadoso; reliably: seguramente; profile: perfil; heart disease: doença do coração; hate: ódio; jealous: com ciúmes; boredentediado; higher rates: taxas mais altas; engagementcomprometimento; predictive: previsível.

Leia o texto e responda à questão.
A
contraste entre as taxas de doenças cardíacas encontradas nos contextos de “tweets positivos" e “tweets negativos".
B
semelhança entre os tipos de palavras encontradas nos tweets das diversas províncias analisadas.
C
oposição entre as palavras positivas e seus efeitos sociais benéficos nos contextos investigados.
D
paralelismo entre o modelo de pesquisa baseado nos tweets e os modelos demográficos e socioeconômicos.
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UNESP 2011 - Inglês - Palavras conectivas | Connective words, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

Indique a alternativa composta de duas orações cujas afirmações se opõem.

Instrução: Leia o texto para responder à questão.

      I started to run because I felt desperately unfit. But the biggest pay-off for me was – and still is – the deep relaxation that I achieve by taking exercise. It tires me out but I find that it does calm me down. When I started running seven years ago, I could manage only 400 meters before I had to stop. Breathless and aching, I walked the next quarter of a mile, alternating these two activities for a couple of kilometers.

      When I started to jog I never dreamt of running in a marathon, but a few years later I realized that if I trained for it, the London Marathon, one of the biggest British sporting events, would be within my reach. My story shows that an unfit 39-year-old, as I was when I started running, who had taken no serious exercise for twenty years, can do the marathon – and that this is a sport in which women can beat men. But is it crazy to do it? Does it make sense to run in the expectation of becoming healthier?

      My advice is: if you are under forty, healthy and feel well, you can begin as I did by jogging gently until you are out of breath, then walking, and alternating the two for about three kilometers. Build up the jogging in stages until you can do the whole distance comfortably.

                                          (Headway Intermediate – Student’s Book. Oxford University Press. Adaptado.)

A
When I started running seven years ago, I could manage only 400 meters before I had to stop.
B
But the biggest pay-off for me was – and still is – the deep relaxation that I achieve.
C
It tires me out but I find that it does calm me down.
D
My story shows that an unfit 39-year-old can do the marathon.
E
Build up the jogging in stages until you can do the whole distance comfortably.
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PUC - Campinas 2015 - Inglês - Vocabulário | Vocabulary, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

Machiavellianism" is a ...... used negative term to characterize unscrupulous politicians of the sort Machiavelli described in The Prince. The book itself gained enormous notoriety and wide readership because most readers assumed the author was teaching and endorsing evil and immoral behavior. Because of this, the term "Machiavellian" is often associated with deceit, deviousness, ambition, and brutality. However that was Machiavelli's stylistic device to gain the reader's attention for his close analysis of the actual techniques used by rulers.

(Adapted from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niccol%C3% B2_Machiavelli)

The word that correctly fills in the blank is

A
hardly.
B
widely.
C
rarely
D
wrongly.
E
likely.
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UERJ 2014 - Inglês - Palavras conectivas | Connective words, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

Writers of memoirs and life stories never lack an audience. People are interested in the actual lives of others (l. 34-35)

The semantic relationship between the two sentences above can be made explicit by the additon of following connective:


A
unless
B
because
C
however
D
as though
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PUC - RJ 2014 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension, Palavras conectivas | Connective words, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

The expression in bold and the item in italics convey equivalent ideas in.

 

 


A
As they replicate themselves, they are also creating more capital.” (lines 15-16) – Although.
B
“Fortune will instead favor a third group: those who can innovate and create new products, services, and business models.” (lines 20-22) – thus.
C
Even though labor is not fully mobile, the other factors increasingly are.” (lines 35-36) – Given that.
D
As a result, the various components of global supply chains can move to labor’s location with little friction or cost.” (lines 36-38) – Yet.
E
So after many manufacturing jobs moved from the United States to China, they appear to be vanishing from China as well.” (lines 73-75) – Therefore.
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PUC - RJ 2013 - Inglês - Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

In “They find immersion stressful and anxiety-inducing, although it is not life-threatening.” (l 67-68), “although” expresses the idea of .


A
regardless of the fact.
B
in addition to.
C
furthermore.
D
likewise.
E
taking into account.
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SENAC-SP 2013 - Inglês - Tipos de advérbios | Types of adverbs, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

A palavra que preenche corretamente a lacuna é:

Atenção: A  questão refere-se ao texto apresentado abaixo.

The stories behind the black opera stars of 'I Live to Sing'
Washington Post − Saturday, August 24, 2013

Julie Cohen and Kamal Khan met in elementary school in Fairfax County about 40 years  . Today, Cohen, 49, is the Brooklyn-based founder of BetterThanFiction Productions, a documentary film company; Khan is the director of the University of Cape Town Opera School. “I Live to Sing," a feature-length documentary directed and produced by Cohen, focuses on three of Khan's black students who made their way from humble beginnings in often poverty-ridden townships to excel in opera ‒an art form most closely associated with white, elite audiences and performers.

How did you come to do this project?
It was just the fortuitous situation of knowing Kamal Khan. I met Kamal in third grade at Pine Ridge Elementary School in Fairfax County. He was unusual in that even at age 9 his prime interests seemed to be opera, classical music, Shakespeare. These are interests that when you're 40 and living in New York are not so strange! He became James Levine's assistant conductor at the Metropolitan Opera and he still now does a lot of conducting internationally, although his home base is at the University of Cape Town. In the meantime I started doing several documentaries about the human side behind the performing arts. Knowing what Kamal was up to I realized that his fascinating work − from an artistic, political and social context − was just the sort of thing I was interested in making films about.

Why is it interesting to you to document performing artists?
We're all so steeped in the relatively small circle of people who become really famous or really big deals. But it's also, I think, wonderful to see the work of and hear the life stories of the majority of performing artists who are toiling away, many of whom are supremely talented, but the world doesn't necessarily get to know.

Tell me about Linda's life, the young soprano featured in your film.
Linda Nteleza comes from a huge township adjacent to Cape Town that has a lot of problems − poverty, health-care issues, education issues, huge unemployment. I believe it has the fastest-growing rate of tuberculosis in the world, and Linda has suffered from the consequences of that. Linda learned to sing in school and then followed by her work in community choir, and through the teachers and coaches learned about University of Cape Town and its music program. She lived only a half-hour from the university but hadn't been aware that music was something that was out there. She was encouraged to go and apply. I think she didn't expect to get it, but to her joy andnamazement she did.
When Linda told her mother that “I want to go to college to study opera," her mother's immediate response was, “What's opera?" It wasn't that she wasn't well-versed in the art form; she didn't know what it was. Linda herself had first heard opera in a TV commercial for Shell Oil that had a beautiful soprano opera singer as background music and she was completely entranced, like, “That's what I want to sing."
Were you an opera fan before this?
[Laughs] I . . . must . . . confess that I was not only not an opera fan, but really almost actively probably disliked opera before this project. That's actually not something that I mentioned to Kamal when I pitched the idea of “Can I follow your program around? Can I bring cameras to your school?" [Laughs] . . . But as often when you delve into different art forms, particularly classical art forms that you are ignorant of, the more you get to know it, the  it starts to sound.

(Adapted from http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/qanda-the-stories-behind-the-black-opera-stars-of-i-live-to sing/2013/08/23)
A
later.
B

before.

C
ago.
D
soon.
E
yet.
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UniCEUB 2014 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Substantivos: definição e tipos | Nouns: definition and types, Preposições | Prepositions, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

The underlined words in the passage are

TEXT 2

                    Gabriel García Márquez was a Literary Giant
                               With a Passion for Journalism

                      By Karla Zabludovsky Friday, April 18,2014

      The late Gabriel García Márquez holds a special place in the hearts of journalists.
      Like Charles Dickens, Mark Twain and Ernest Hemingway — or contemporaries like Pete Hamill and Tom Wolfe — García Márquez, a titan of 20th century literature, honed his writing skills as a reporter
before he became a celebrated novelist.
      Even as his literary star rose, García Márquez, known colloquially across Latin America as Gabo, spoke proudly, tenderly and frequently about journalism.
      “Those who are self-taught are avid and quick, and during those bygone times, we were that to a great extent in order to keep paving the way for the best profession in the world… as we ourselves called
it," said García Márquez during a speech about journalism at the 52nd Assembly of the Inter American Press Association in 1996.

                                                                                                                                             Newsweek Magazine
A
adjectives.
B
adverbs.
C
nouns.
D
prepositions.
E
verbs.
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UFAC 2008 - Inglês - Sinônimos | Synonyms, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

The time conjunction “so far” (line 06) in the text could be correctly replaced by:

Imagem 002.jpg

A
Now
B
Nowadays
C
Until
D
Until Now
E
Now and now
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PUC - RS 2011 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Substantivos: definição e tipos | Nouns: definition and types, Artigos definido e indefinidos | Definite and indefinite articles, Preposições | Prepositions, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions, Pronomes | Pronouns

De acordo com seu uso no texto, pertencem à mesma categoria gramatical os termos da alternativa

Imagem 044.jpg
A
according ( line 02) – sensation ( line 04).
B
temporary ( line 04) – lacking ( line 06).
C
assertive ( line 07) – exercising ( line 11).
D
notable ( line 12) – unfavorably ( line 13).
E
praiseworthy ( ine 15) – efficient ( ine 16).
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CEDERJ 2011 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension, Palavras conectivas | Connective words, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

“[…] since eBooks are useless without an eBook reader” (lines 25-26) means

Read the text again and answer questions 38, 39,
40.



A
eBooks must be used by proficient readers.
B
readers of conventional books cannot read eBooks.
C
eBooks do not depend on electricity.
D
you must have an eBook reader to read an eBook.
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CEDERJ 2011, CEDERJ 2011 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension, Palavras conectivas | Connective words, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

No primeiro parágrafo, o conectivo however é usado para contrastar as seguintes ideias:

Imagem 035.jpg

A
o eBook e o livro de papel são similares, mas um pode oferecer vantagens sobre o outro.
B
o livro de papel oferece mais vantagens do que o eBook, mas seu material é antiquado.
C
o eBook e o livro de papel são similares, mas o material do eBook é mais resistente.
D
o eBook e o livro de papel têm formatos pouco similares, mas ambos apresentam vantagens e desvantagens.
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UDESC 2007 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Substantivos: definição e tipos | Nouns: definition and types, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

According to the text:

...four wheel, in ... four wheel driving ... (line 17); ... two hour; in ... two hour flight ... (line 19); are:

        Text 2

01    Take a dive with hundreds of tropical fish, colorful coral and the world's biggest fish, the
        whale shark, at unspoilt Ningaloo Reef.
        The reef on Western Australia's mid north coast, has gained an impressive reputation as
        one of Earth's last ocean paradise.
05    It's one of the largest fringing reefs in the world and unlike many others; you can get to it
        just by stepping off the beach.
        The marine park stretches 260 kilometers from Bundegi Reef near the town of Exmouth to
        Amherst Point near Coral Bay in the south.
        It reaches nearly 20 kilometers seaward, encompassing a massive 5,000 square
10    kilometers of ocean with 500 species of tropical fish and 220 species of coral in all.
        Nothing can compare to the thrill of swimming beside a whale shark. These docile
        creatures visit the reef each year between April and June.
        Rare turtle species hatch here in late January and February. Watch this amazing natural
        phenomenon on special guided, eco-interactive trails.
15    Accommodation in the area is comfortable and ranges from camping and backpacker style
        to chalets, motels, eco-retreats and self catering apartments.
        It's not all about the water at Ningaloo - go four wheel driving to Cape Range National
        Park to see amazing red rock canyons and gorges.
        Getting there is easy - take a two hour flight north of Perth, or give yourself two days to
        drive there from the capital.
        (www.westernaustralia.com)

According to Text 2, answer the questions below:




A
Adverbs of frequency
B
Just amounts
C
Verbs
D
Compound adjectives
E
Numbers
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UDESC 2007 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Substantivos: definição e tipos | Nouns: definition and types, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions, Pronomes | Pronouns

The words: its (in line 4), even (in line 7) and rampant (in line 5), are used in the text as:

          Text 1
01     There, in the pasture greenery,
         Sun mottling Nature's breast,
         It was the summer wind's song
         That filled me with its crest.
05     Emotion running rampant--
         Rivers to the sea--
         I could not even fathom the flood of you and me.

         But take me in your arms again
         And do not talk of time.
10     Let flesh rub flesh to parchment--
         Pale flowers crushed--
         And grind more mortar for my soul's room . . .
         Paint mirrors for my mind.

(Michela Curtis: www.poetry.com)


According to Text 1, answer the questions below:


A
Pronoun, adverb, adjective
B
Pronoun, noun, adverb
C
Verb, pronoun, adjective
D
Pronoun, verb, noun
E
Adjective, substantive, verb
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UFT 2011 - Inglês - Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

Mark the CORRECT answer according to the poem:

Imagem 012.jpg



A
The words "conquering" (line 1) and "trampling" (line 3) are in the same grammatical category because they are both adverbs.
B
"Our" (line 1) is a possessive pronoun, while "us" (line 1) is a possessive adjective.
C
The pronoun "their" (line 3) refers to the word "swords".
D
The suffix "less" represents "lack of", so the word "senseless" (line 11) means without sense.
E
The construction ?milk-white" (line 14) is an adverb.
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UFT 2011 - Inglês - Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

In the sentence "innocent till proven guilty" the word ?till? can be replaced, without changing its meaning, by:

Imagem 011.jpg



A
Until
B
Still
C
However
D
After
E
But
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UNESP 2013 - Inglês - Sinônimos | Synonyms, Advérbios e conjunções | Adverbs and conjunctions

No trecho final do último parágrafo – “all-natural” does not mean the product qualifies as Certified Organic, so be sure to look beyond the hype. –, a conjunção so pode ser substituída, sem alteração de sentido, por

How can consumers find out if a corporation is “greenwashing” environmentally unsavory practices?

imagem-008.jpg
A
however.
B
furthermore.
C
because.
D
although
E
therefore.