Questõesde FATEC 2015 sobre Inglês

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Foram encontradas 12 questões
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FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension, Pronomes | Pronouns

O pronome relativo whose, em negrito no terceiro parágrafo, refere-se a

Learn ‘n’ go

How quickly can people learn new skills?

Jan 25th 2014 – from the print edition


      In 2012, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee took a ride in one of Google’s driverless cars. The car’s performance, they report, was flawless, boring and, above all, “weird”. Only a few years earlier, “We were sure that computers would not be able to drive cars.” Only humans, they thought, could make sense of the countless, shifting patterns of driving a car – with oncoming1 traffic, changing lights and wayward2 jaywalkers3 .

      Machines have mastered driving. And not just driving. In ways that are only now becoming apparent, the authors argue, machines can forecast home prices, design beer bottles, teach at universities, grade exams and do countless other things better and more cheaply than humans. (…)

      This will have one principal good consequence, and one bad. The good is bounty4 . Households will spend less on groceries, utilities and clothing; the deaf will be able to hear, the blind to see. The bad is spread5 . The gap is growing between the lucky few whose abilities and skills are enhanced6 by technology, and the far more numerous middle-skilled people competing for the remaining7 jobs that machines cannot do, such as folding towels and waiting at tables. (…) People should develop skills that complement, rather than compete with computers, such as idea generation and complex communication. (…)

<http://tinyurl.com/m2zmazg>Acesso em: 27.07.2015. Adaptado.

Glossário

1oncoming: iminente; próximo.

2wayward: desobediente; instável.

3jaywalker: pedestre imprudente.

4bounty: recompensa.

5spread: propagação; extensão.

6enhanced: aprimorado(a).

7remaining: remanescente.

A
the gap.
B
growing.
C
between.
D
technology.
E
the lucky few.
918365b4-b1
FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Ainda conforme o primeiro parágrafo, a performance do carro desenvolvido pelo Google foi avaliada por Erik Brynjolfsson e Andrew McAfee como

Learn ‘n’ go

How quickly can people learn new skills?

Jan 25th 2014 – from the print edition


      In 2012, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee took a ride in one of Google’s driverless cars. The car’s performance, they report, was flawless, boring and, above all, “weird”. Only a few years earlier, “We were sure that computers would not be able to drive cars.” Only humans, they thought, could make sense of the countless, shifting patterns of driving a car – with oncoming1 traffic, changing lights and wayward2 jaywalkers3 .

      Machines have mastered driving. And not just driving. In ways that are only now becoming apparent, the authors argue, machines can forecast home prices, design beer bottles, teach at universities, grade exams and do countless other things better and more cheaply than humans. (…)

      This will have one principal good consequence, and one bad. The good is bounty4 . Households will spend less on groceries, utilities and clothing; the deaf will be able to hear, the blind to see. The bad is spread5 . The gap is growing between the lucky few whose abilities and skills are enhanced6 by technology, and the far more numerous middle-skilled people competing for the remaining7 jobs that machines cannot do, such as folding towels and waiting at tables. (…) People should develop skills that complement, rather than compete with computers, such as idea generation and complex communication. (…)

<http://tinyurl.com/m2zmazg>Acesso em: 27.07.2015. Adaptado.

Glossário

1oncoming: iminente; próximo.

2wayward: desobediente; instável.

3jaywalker: pedestre imprudente.

4bounty: recompensa.

5spread: propagação; extensão.

6enhanced: aprimorado(a).

7remaining: remanescente.

A
perfeita.
B
insegura.
C
perigosa.
D
excitante.
E
barulhenta.
918cd9a3-b1
FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Verbos modais | Modal verbs

O modal verb should em “People should develop skills that complement” (terceiro parágrafo) expressa a ideia de

Learn ‘n’ go

How quickly can people learn new skills?

Jan 25th 2014 – from the print edition


      In 2012, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee took a ride in one of Google’s driverless cars. The car’s performance, they report, was flawless, boring and, above all, “weird”. Only a few years earlier, “We were sure that computers would not be able to drive cars.” Only humans, they thought, could make sense of the countless, shifting patterns of driving a car – with oncoming1 traffic, changing lights and wayward2 jaywalkers3 .

      Machines have mastered driving. And not just driving. In ways that are only now becoming apparent, the authors argue, machines can forecast home prices, design beer bottles, teach at universities, grade exams and do countless other things better and more cheaply than humans. (…)

      This will have one principal good consequence, and one bad. The good is bounty4 . Households will spend less on groceries, utilities and clothing; the deaf will be able to hear, the blind to see. The bad is spread5 . The gap is growing between the lucky few whose abilities and skills are enhanced6 by technology, and the far more numerous middle-skilled people competing for the remaining7 jobs that machines cannot do, such as folding towels and waiting at tables. (…) People should develop skills that complement, rather than compete with computers, such as idea generation and complex communication. (…)

<http://tinyurl.com/m2zmazg>Acesso em: 27.07.2015. Adaptado.

Glossário

1oncoming: iminente; próximo.

2wayward: desobediente; instável.

3jaywalker: pedestre imprudente.

4bounty: recompensa.

5spread: propagação; extensão.

6enhanced: aprimorado(a).

7remaining: remanescente.

A
ability.
B
advice.
C
obligation.
D
deduction.
E
permission.
918a2aa8-b1
FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

A respeito das tarefas que as máquinas podem desempenhar, e de acordo com o que é mencionado diretamente no segundo parágrafo, pode-se afirmar corretamente que

Learn ‘n’ go

How quickly can people learn new skills?

Jan 25th 2014 – from the print edition


      In 2012, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee took a ride in one of Google’s driverless cars. The car’s performance, they report, was flawless, boring and, above all, “weird”. Only a few years earlier, “We were sure that computers would not be able to drive cars.” Only humans, they thought, could make sense of the countless, shifting patterns of driving a car – with oncoming1 traffic, changing lights and wayward2 jaywalkers3 .

      Machines have mastered driving. And not just driving. In ways that are only now becoming apparent, the authors argue, machines can forecast home prices, design beer bottles, teach at universities, grade exams and do countless other things better and more cheaply than humans. (…)

      This will have one principal good consequence, and one bad. The good is bounty4 . Households will spend less on groceries, utilities and clothing; the deaf will be able to hear, the blind to see. The bad is spread5 . The gap is growing between the lucky few whose abilities and skills are enhanced6 by technology, and the far more numerous middle-skilled people competing for the remaining7 jobs that machines cannot do, such as folding towels and waiting at tables. (…) People should develop skills that complement, rather than compete with computers, such as idea generation and complex communication. (…)

<http://tinyurl.com/m2zmazg>Acesso em: 27.07.2015. Adaptado.

Glossário

1oncoming: iminente; próximo.

2wayward: desobediente; instável.

3jaywalker: pedestre imprudente.

4bounty: recompensa.

5spread: propagação; extensão.

6enhanced: aprimorado(a).

7remaining: remanescente.

A
as máquinas ainda não podem lecionar em universidades.
B
as máquinas ainda não são capazes de dirigir um carro com precisão.
C
existem incontáveis tarefas que podem ser realizadas por máquinas de forma mais barata do que por humanos.
D
as tarefas realizadas pelas máquinas têm resultados muitas vezes inferiores quando comparados aos obtidos por humanos.
E
as tarefas realizadas pelas máquinas, apesar de apresentarem melhores resultados, tornam-se mais caras do que as realizadas por humanos.
9187185c-b1
FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

De acordo com o primeiro parágrafo, em 2012, Erik Brynjolfsson e Andrew McAfee

Learn ‘n’ go

How quickly can people learn new skills?

Jan 25th 2014 – from the print edition


      In 2012, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee took a ride in one of Google’s driverless cars. The car’s performance, they report, was flawless, boring and, above all, “weird”. Only a few years earlier, “We were sure that computers would not be able to drive cars.” Only humans, they thought, could make sense of the countless, shifting patterns of driving a car – with oncoming1 traffic, changing lights and wayward2 jaywalkers3 .

      Machines have mastered driving. And not just driving. In ways that are only now becoming apparent, the authors argue, machines can forecast home prices, design beer bottles, teach at universities, grade exams and do countless other things better and more cheaply than humans. (…)

      This will have one principal good consequence, and one bad. The good is bounty4 . Households will spend less on groceries, utilities and clothing; the deaf will be able to hear, the blind to see. The bad is spread5 . The gap is growing between the lucky few whose abilities and skills are enhanced6 by technology, and the far more numerous middle-skilled people competing for the remaining7 jobs that machines cannot do, such as folding towels and waiting at tables. (…) People should develop skills that complement, rather than compete with computers, such as idea generation and complex communication. (…)

<http://tinyurl.com/m2zmazg>Acesso em: 27.07.2015. Adaptado.

Glossário

1oncoming: iminente; próximo.

2wayward: desobediente; instável.

3jaywalker: pedestre imprudente.

4bounty: recompensa.

5spread: propagação; extensão.

6enhanced: aprimorado(a).

7remaining: remanescente.

A
foram os primeiros compradores do carro elétrico.
B
venderam o projeto do carro elétrico para o Google.
C
passearam no carro que não precisava de motorista.
D
trabalharam para o Google e compraram o primeiro carro deles.
E
usaram o Google para buscar as peças utilizadas na montagem do carro deles.
913f463f-b1
FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Aspectos linguísticos | Linguistic aspects, Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Leia o texto em que um termo foi retirado.


Rio 2016 unveils innovative Olympic torch

The innovative design, which is _________________ by the warmth of the Brazilian people, features moveable segments that expand vertically to reveal the colours of Brazil when the Olympic flame is passed from one torchbearer to another. The triangular shape of the torch, meanwhile, alludes to the three Olympic Values of excellence, friendship and respect, while the floating effect of its different segments represents the efforts of the athletes.

<http://tinyurl.com/qee99wp>Acesso em: 28.07.2015. Adaptado.



A forma verbal que melhor completa o parágrafo de modo a tornar a sentença gramaticalmente correta é

A
inspired.
B
inspiring.
C
inspire.
D
inspiral.
E
not inspire.
34fc7fc4-b2
FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Voz Ativa e Passiva | Passive and Active Voice

Assinale a alternativa que apresenta o uso da voz passiva.

Technology isn’t working

The digital revolution has yet to fulfil its promise of higher productivity and better jobs

      If there is a technological revolution in progress, rich economies could be forgiven for wishing it would go away. Workers in America, Europe and Japan have been through a difficult few decades. In the 1970s the blistering growth after the second world war vanished in both Europe and America. In the early 1990s Japan joined the slump, entering a prolonged period of economic stagnation. Brief spells of faster growth in intervening years quickly petered out. The rich world is still trying to shake off the effects of the 2008 financial crisis. And now the digital economy, far from pushing up wages across the board in response to higher productivity, is keeping them flat for the mass of workers while extravagantly rewarding the most talented ones.

      It seems difficult to square this unhappy experience with the extraordinary technological progress during that period, but the same thing has happened before. Most economic historians reckon there was very little improvement in living standards in Britain in the century after the first Industrial Revolution. And in the early 20th century, as Victorian inventions such as electric lighting came into their own, productivity growth was every bit as slow as it has been in recent decades.

<http://tinyurl.com/lv6rj7b>Acesso em: 18.02.2015. Adaptado.

A
Technology isn’t working (título)
B
rich economies could be forgiven (1° parágrafo)
C
after the second world war vanished in both Europe and America (1° parágrafo)
D
In the early 1990s Japan joined the slump (1° parágrafo)
E
but the same thing has happened before (2° parágrafo)
34f91879-b2
FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

De acordo com o segundo parágrafo do texto,

Technology isn’t working

The digital revolution has yet to fulfil its promise of higher productivity and better jobs

      If there is a technological revolution in progress, rich economies could be forgiven for wishing it would go away. Workers in America, Europe and Japan have been through a difficult few decades. In the 1970s the blistering growth after the second world war vanished in both Europe and America. In the early 1990s Japan joined the slump, entering a prolonged period of economic stagnation. Brief spells of faster growth in intervening years quickly petered out. The rich world is still trying to shake off the effects of the 2008 financial crisis. And now the digital economy, far from pushing up wages across the board in response to higher productivity, is keeping them flat for the mass of workers while extravagantly rewarding the most talented ones.

      It seems difficult to square this unhappy experience with the extraordinary technological progress during that period, but the same thing has happened before. Most economic historians reckon there was very little improvement in living standards in Britain in the century after the first Industrial Revolution. And in the early 20th century, as Victorian inventions such as electric lighting came into their own, productivity growth was every bit as slow as it has been in recent decades.

<http://tinyurl.com/lv6rj7b>Acesso em: 18.02.2015. Adaptado.

A
a Revolução Industrial proporcionou melhorias significativas nos padrões de vida na Grã-Bretanha.
B
a experiência frustrante com o progresso tecnológico já ocorrera em outros momentos históricos.
C
o desenvolvimento tecnológico, nas últimas décadas, definitivamente não foi muito expressivo.
D
o uso da luz elétrica trouxe aumentos expressivos nos índices de crescimento de produtividade.
E
a Revolução Industrial apresentou efeitos significativos para a melhoria das condições de segurança no trabalho.
34f5cea2-b2
FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

O termo “the same thing”, em destaque no segundo parágrafo, refere-se a

Technology isn’t working

The digital revolution has yet to fulfil its promise of higher productivity and better jobs

      If there is a technological revolution in progress, rich economies could be forgiven for wishing it would go away. Workers in America, Europe and Japan have been through a difficult few decades. In the 1970s the blistering growth after the second world war vanished in both Europe and America. In the early 1990s Japan joined the slump, entering a prolonged period of economic stagnation. Brief spells of faster growth in intervening years quickly petered out. The rich world is still trying to shake off the effects of the 2008 financial crisis. And now the digital economy, far from pushing up wages across the board in response to higher productivity, is keeping them flat for the mass of workers while extravagantly rewarding the most talented ones.

      It seems difficult to square this unhappy experience with the extraordinary technological progress during that period, but the same thing has happened before. Most economic historians reckon there was very little improvement in living standards in Britain in the century after the first Industrial Revolution. And in the early 20th century, as Victorian inventions such as electric lighting came into their own, productivity growth was every bit as slow as it has been in recent decades.

<http://tinyurl.com/lv6rj7b>Acesso em: 18.02.2015. Adaptado.

A
this unhappy experience.
B
living standards.
C
talented ones.
D
workers.
E
wages.
34f28494-b2
FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Pelas informações do texto, um dos resultados da economia digital foi

Technology isn’t working

The digital revolution has yet to fulfil its promise of higher productivity and better jobs

      If there is a technological revolution in progress, rich economies could be forgiven for wishing it would go away. Workers in America, Europe and Japan have been through a difficult few decades. In the 1970s the blistering growth after the second world war vanished in both Europe and America. In the early 1990s Japan joined the slump, entering a prolonged period of economic stagnation. Brief spells of faster growth in intervening years quickly petered out. The rich world is still trying to shake off the effects of the 2008 financial crisis. And now the digital economy, far from pushing up wages across the board in response to higher productivity, is keeping them flat for the mass of workers while extravagantly rewarding the most talented ones.

      It seems difficult to square this unhappy experience with the extraordinary technological progress during that period, but the same thing has happened before. Most economic historians reckon there was very little improvement in living standards in Britain in the century after the first Industrial Revolution. And in the early 20th century, as Victorian inventions such as electric lighting came into their own, productivity growth was every bit as slow as it has been in recent decades.

<http://tinyurl.com/lv6rj7b>Acesso em: 18.02.2015. Adaptado.

A
melhorar salários de todos os trabalhadores.
B
recompensar os trabalhadores mais talentosos.
C
duplicar os índices de desemprego devido ao uso da tecnologia.
D
triplicar o número de trabalhadores com acesso a computadores.
E
aumentar o nível de escolaridade da maior parte dos trabalhadores.
34ef8495-b2
FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

De acordo com o texto, os efeitos da tecnologia notados na América, Europa e Japão

Technology isn’t working

The digital revolution has yet to fulfil its promise of higher productivity and better jobs

      If there is a technological revolution in progress, rich economies could be forgiven for wishing it would go away. Workers in America, Europe and Japan have been through a difficult few decades. In the 1970s the blistering growth after the second world war vanished in both Europe and America. In the early 1990s Japan joined the slump, entering a prolonged period of economic stagnation. Brief spells of faster growth in intervening years quickly petered out. The rich world is still trying to shake off the effects of the 2008 financial crisis. And now the digital economy, far from pushing up wages across the board in response to higher productivity, is keeping them flat for the mass of workers while extravagantly rewarding the most talented ones.

      It seems difficult to square this unhappy experience with the extraordinary technological progress during that period, but the same thing has happened before. Most economic historians reckon there was very little improvement in living standards in Britain in the century after the first Industrial Revolution. And in the early 20th century, as Victorian inventions such as electric lighting came into their own, productivity growth was every bit as slow as it has been in recent decades.

<http://tinyurl.com/lv6rj7b>Acesso em: 18.02.2015. Adaptado.

A
foram positivos para a grande maioria dos trabalhadores, considerando o aumento ocorrido em seus salários.
B
foram positivos para a grande maioria dos trabalhadores, considerando a melhora nas condições de segurança no trabalho.
C
ficaram aquém das expectativas em termos de aumento de produtividade, mas foram satisfatórios com relação a melhores empregos.
D

ficaram aquém das expectativas em termos de melhores empregos, mas superaram as expectativas com relação à produtividade.

E
ficaram aquém das expectativas em termos de aumento da produtividade e de melhores empregos.
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FATEC 2015 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Considere o cartum.


<http://tinyurl.com/kl3oyrm>Acesso em: 16.03.2015.


O texto do cartum faz referência direta ao fato de

A
a empresa poder demitir o empregado por ele desconhecer o manual de segurança.
B
a empresa em que o empregado trabalha não possuir um manual de procedimentos de segurança.
C
o empregado ter tempo para ler o manual de segurança por ter se machucado no trabalho.
D
o empregado receber uma punição por não ter lido os procedimentos do manual de segurança.
E
o empregado ter machucado o nariz, mesmo seguindo os procedimentos de segurança presentes no manual.