Questõesde UEPB sobre Inglês

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176e8b55-de
UEPB 2009 - Inglês - Preposições | Prepositions

Which is the CORRECT ORDER of the prepositions missing from PARAGRAPH 4 of TEXT D:

TEXT D

PARAGRAPH 1: The payment of fees by students is widely seen as a novelty. In fact this ‘innovation’ marks a return to the medieval origins of universities. At that time student money meant student power on a huge scale. Medieval student power was focused on the University of Bologna. […] This power was based on their economic grip over their teachers.[…] Most university lecturers depended for their academic incomes on teaching fees collected from their students. […] The power which students derived from paying fees at Bologna led to extensive control over the lecturing system. […]

PARAGRAPH 2: For what was a lecturer punished? He was fined if he started the lectures a minute late or if he went beyond the approved time. […] The lecturer was also fined if he failed to cover the syllabus according to an agreed timetable. […]

PARAGRAPH 3: All students were encouraged to denounce lecturers who were absent without leave or who contravened the statutes in any other way. In addition, there was also an organized system of secret denunciations. Four students were elected in secret to spy on the lecturers. […]

PARAGRAPH 4: Student power at Bologna lasted a little over one hundred years […] As __ its rise, its demise is linked directly __ the subject __ student fees. By 1350 almost all the lecturers were appointed and paid __ the local commune. With changes in the payment of lecturers, control of the university passed __ the students to the commune and there it would remain.

PARAGRAPH 5: What does the situation in medieval Bologna have to say to us? Hopefully the return of student fees will not be accompanied by the return of student spies, secret denunciations and fines on lecturers. But, as ever greater emphasis is placed on research, the Bolognese case may be a timely reminder of the demands of students and of the importance of high quality teaching.

UOW Magazine, ISSUE 9 
A
with, to, of, by, from.
B
to, with, of, from, by.
C
by, to, with, of, from.
D
from, of, by, with, to.
E
of, to, by, from, with.
17633184-de
UEPB 2009 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

According to TEXT C the difference between the East and West is due to:

TEXT C

You Can Blame the Bugs


The West epitomizes individualistic, do-your-own-thing cultures, ones where the rights of the individual equal and often trump those of the group and where differences are valued. East Asian societies exalt the larger society; behavior is constrained by social roles, conformity is prized, outsiders shunned. […] But the reason a society falls where it does on the individualism-collectivism spectrum has been pretty much a mystery. Now a team of researchers has come up with a surprising explanation: disease-causing microbes. Societies that evolved in places with an abundance of pathogens, they argue, had to adopt behaviors that add up to collectivism, for reasons of sheer preservation. Societies that arose in places with fewer pathogens had the luxury of individualism, which is less effective at limiting the spread of disease but brings with it other social benefits, such as innovation. […]

    How might pathogen-fighting customs and attitudes arise, or fail to? Maybe people make conscious efforts to act in ways that inhibit the spread of pathogens, such as by shunning strangers and demanding conformity. Or maybe there are genes for behaviors that, at the level of a whole society, manifest themselves as collectivism or individualism, and genes for individualism get wiped out in diseaseplagued regions. But when East Asians move to the West or Westerners go East, […] they begin to see, think and behave like people in their adopted society. That would be hard to do if they were in the grip of collectivist or individualistic genes. The presence of pathogens also predicts cross-cultural differences in personality traits, not just shared cultural values. […] The physical world has shaped skin color and other superficial features. The next frontier is fathoming how it might have shaped our very thoughts and values. 

Sharon Begley, Newsweek, April 14th, 2008
A
The number of diseases faced by societies.
B
The number of races present in societies.
C
The number of ethnic groups in societies.
D
The geographical factors in the environment.
E
The inherent differences between races.
17675393-de
UEPB 2009 - Inglês - Aspectos linguísticos | Linguistic aspects

The roots of the words ‘individualistic’, ‘behavior’ ‘conformity’, ‘collectivism’, and ‘explanation’ in TEXT C are respectively

TEXT C

You Can Blame the Bugs


The West epitomizes individualistic, do-your-own-thing cultures, ones where the rights of the individual equal and often trump those of the group and where differences are valued. East Asian societies exalt the larger society; behavior is constrained by social roles, conformity is prized, outsiders shunned. […] But the reason a society falls where it does on the individualism-collectivism spectrum has been pretty much a mystery. Now a team of researchers has come up with a surprising explanation: disease-causing microbes. Societies that evolved in places with an abundance of pathogens, they argue, had to adopt behaviors that add up to collectivism, for reasons of sheer preservation. Societies that arose in places with fewer pathogens had the luxury of individualism, which is less effective at limiting the spread of disease but brings with it other social benefits, such as innovation. […]

    How might pathogen-fighting customs and attitudes arise, or fail to? Maybe people make conscious efforts to act in ways that inhibit the spread of pathogens, such as by shunning strangers and demanding conformity. Or maybe there are genes for behaviors that, at the level of a whole society, manifest themselves as collectivism or individualism, and genes for individualism get wiped out in diseaseplagued regions. But when East Asians move to the West or Westerners go East, […] they begin to see, think and behave like people in their adopted society. That would be hard to do if they were in the grip of collectivist or individualistic genes. The presence of pathogens also predicts cross-cultural differences in personality traits, not just shared cultural values. […] The physical world has shaped skin color and other superficial features. The next frontier is fathoming how it might have shaped our very thoughts and values. 

Sharon Begley, Newsweek, April 14th, 2008
A
individual, behav, conform, collective, explain.
B
individualist, behav, conform , collect, explan.
C
individualist, behave, conform , collective, explanate.
D
individual, behave, conform, collect, explain .
E
individual, behave, conf, collective, explanate.
175fda45-de
UEPB 2009 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

The function of TEXT C is to

TEXT C

You Can Blame the Bugs


The West epitomizes individualistic, do-your-own-thing cultures, ones where the rights of the individual equal and often trump those of the group and where differences are valued. East Asian societies exalt the larger society; behavior is constrained by social roles, conformity is prized, outsiders shunned. […] But the reason a society falls where it does on the individualism-collectivism spectrum has been pretty much a mystery. Now a team of researchers has come up with a surprising explanation: disease-causing microbes. Societies that evolved in places with an abundance of pathogens, they argue, had to adopt behaviors that add up to collectivism, for reasons of sheer preservation. Societies that arose in places with fewer pathogens had the luxury of individualism, which is less effective at limiting the spread of disease but brings with it other social benefits, such as innovation. […]

    How might pathogen-fighting customs and attitudes arise, or fail to? Maybe people make conscious efforts to act in ways that inhibit the spread of pathogens, such as by shunning strangers and demanding conformity. Or maybe there are genes for behaviors that, at the level of a whole society, manifest themselves as collectivism or individualism, and genes for individualism get wiped out in diseaseplagued regions. But when East Asians move to the West or Westerners go East, […] they begin to see, think and behave like people in their adopted society. That would be hard to do if they were in the grip of collectivist or individualistic genes. The presence of pathogens also predicts cross-cultural differences in personality traits, not just shared cultural values. […] The physical world has shaped skin color and other superficial features. The next frontier is fathoming how it might have shaped our very thoughts and values. 

Sharon Begley, Newsweek, April 14th, 2008
A
Narrate.
B
Compare and Contrast.
C
Classify.
D
Announce.
E
Define.
17574ab8-de
UEPB 2009 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

The birds in TEXT B are associated with


A
stupidity.
B
youth.
C
wisdom.
D
daylight.
E
childhood.
175c218e-de
UEPB 2009 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

The connection between the bird’s educational qualification and the sound it makes in TEXT B is the following:


A
The bird is anti-social.
B
WHOM is an acronym for English major.
C
The bird cannot speak correct English.
D
The bird’s speech is inaudible.
E
The bird’s speech reflects its obsession with English grammar.
17530a91-de
UEPB 2009 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

The birds in TEXT B are


A
sparrows.
B
kites.
C
hawks.
D
vultures.
E
owls.
17462a85-de
UEPB 2009 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Which season of the year does TEXT A talk about:

TEXT A


Written in March


The cock is crowing,
The stream is flowing,
The small birds twitter,
The lake doth glitter,
The green field sleeps in the sun;
The oldest and youngest
Are at work with the strongest;
The cattle are grazing,
Their heads never raising;
There are forty feeding like one!

Like an army defeated
The snow hath retreated,
And now doth fare ill
On the top of the bare hill;
The ploughboy is whooping-anon-anon
There’s joy in the mountains;
There’s life in the fountains;
Small clouds are sailing,
Blue sky prevailing;
The rain is over and gone!

By: William Wordsworth

Vocabulary: Hath = has; doth = does; fare ill = to do badly; ploughboy = a country boy; whooping = cry of joy; anon = soon
A
Summer
B
Spring
C
Autumn
D
Winter
E
The rainy season
174a90a7-de
UEPB 2009 - Inglês - Aspectos linguísticos | Linguistic aspects

The words which indicate some form of water in TEXT A are:

TEXT A


Written in March


The cock is crowing,
The stream is flowing,
The small birds twitter,
The lake doth glitter,
The green field sleeps in the sun;
The oldest and youngest
Are at work with the strongest;
The cattle are grazing,
Their heads never raising;
There are forty feeding like one!

Like an army defeated
The snow hath retreated,
And now doth fare ill
On the top of the bare hill;
The ploughboy is whooping-anon-anon
There’s joy in the mountains;
There’s life in the fountains;
Small clouds are sailing,
Blue sky prevailing;
The rain is over and gone!

By: William Wordsworth

Vocabulary: Hath = has; doth = does; fare ill = to do badly; ploughboy = a country boy; whooping = cry of joy; anon = soon
A
Stream, lake, fountains, rain, snow.
B
Sky, stream, snow, rain, fountains.
C
Lake, field, fountains, rain, snow.
D
Rain, snow, cattle, stream, lake.
E
Fountains, rain, cock, field, stream.
174f397e-de
UEPB 2009 - Inglês - Grau dos adjetivos | Adjective degrees, Adjetivos | Adjectives, Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

The superlative forms ‘oldest’, ‘youngest’ and ‘strongest’ in TEXT A refer to

TEXT A


Written in March


The cock is crowing,
The stream is flowing,
The small birds twitter,
The lake doth glitter,
The green field sleeps in the sun;
The oldest and youngest
Are at work with the strongest;
The cattle are grazing,
Their heads never raising;
There are forty feeding like one!

Like an army defeated
The snow hath retreated,
And now doth fare ill
On the top of the bare hill;
The ploughboy is whooping-anon-anon
There’s joy in the mountains;
There’s life in the fountains;
Small clouds are sailing,
Blue sky prevailing;
The rain is over and gone!

By: William Wordsworth

Vocabulary: Hath = has; doth = does; fare ill = to do badly; ploughboy = a country boy; whooping = cry of joy; anon = soon
A
forty.
B
work.
C
cattle.
D
heads.
E
people.
36f07caa-b7
UEPB 2010 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

According to text C the advances in synthetic biology will lead to:

TEXT C

(The Economist, May 22nd, 2010)

A
improvements in the field of computer science.
B
improvements in the field of agriculture and medicines.
C
improvements in the field of nuclear science.
D
improvements in the field of Scientology.
E
improvements in the field of Nano technology.
36ecfab6-b7
UEPB 2010 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Text C

TEXT C

(The Economist, May 22nd, 2010)

A
alerts the reader to the dangers present in the new biological science.
B
ignores the dangers of the new biological science.
C
speaks only of the positive aspects of the new biological science.
D
speaks only of the negative aspects of the new biological science.
E
condemns, the new biological science totally.
36e87b62-b7
UEPB 2010 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Text C

TEXT C

(The Economist, May 22nd, 2010)

A
affirms the superiority of man over gods.
B
celebrates the creation of life by man.
C
declares the superiority of gods over man.
D
confirms man’s inability to make artificial life.
E
states that man is inferior to gods.
36c6ba7d-b7
UEPB 2010 - Inglês - Vocabulário | Vocabulary, Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

The meaning of the word “murky” in the second sentence of text B is:

TEXT B

High Marks for Clean Water

     Retrieve a discarded water bottle. Tear off the label and fill it with any water that’s not too murky from a creek, standpipe or a puddle. Place the bottle on a piece of metal in full sun. In six hours the UVA radiation will kill viruses, bacteria and parasites in the water, making it safe to drink.
     SODIS, the acronym for this Swiss - pioneered water - disinfection program, is now being used all over the world to provide drinking water for some four million people. “It’s simple, it’s free, and it’s effective,” says Ibelatha Mhelela, principal of the Ndolela Primary School in Tanzania. In 2006 her school started using SODIS to disinfect its contaminated tap water, placing bottles on the building’s corrugated metal roof. The result? Absenteeism due to diarrhea has dropped considerably, and examination scores soared. “Before we started SODIS, only ten to fifteen percent of the children passed the national sixth grade exams,” says Mhelela, “Now ninety to ninety - five percent of the students pass.” 

(National Geographic, April 2010)
A
transparent.
B
clear.
C
dirty.
D
translucent.
E
lucid.
36e03cfd-b7
UEPB 2010 - Inglês - Adjetivos | Adjectives, Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Which of the following words functions as an adjective in text C?

TEXT C

(The Economist, May 22nd, 2010)

A
creeping (line 11)
B
ushering (line 7)
C
tampering (line 10)
D
living (line 2)
E
creating (line 14)
36dbe9eb-b7
UEPB 2010 - Inglês - Tempos Verbais | Verb Tenses, Verbos modais | Modal verbs

The modal auxiliary “should” in the first sentence of the second paragraph of text C indicates

TEXT C

(The Economist, May 22nd, 2010)

A
ability
B
capacity
C
possibility.
D
obligation.
E
permission.
36d6af5b-b7
UEPB 2010 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

According to text B, after adopting SODIS:

TEXT B

High Marks for Clean Water

     Retrieve a discarded water bottle. Tear off the label and fill it with any water that’s not too murky from a creek, standpipe or a puddle. Place the bottle on a piece of metal in full sun. In six hours the UVA radiation will kill viruses, bacteria and parasites in the water, making it safe to drink.
     SODIS, the acronym for this Swiss - pioneered water - disinfection program, is now being used all over the world to provide drinking water for some four million people. “It’s simple, it’s free, and it’s effective,” says Ibelatha Mhelela, principal of the Ndolela Primary School in Tanzania. In 2006 her school started using SODIS to disinfect its contaminated tap water, placing bottles on the building’s corrugated metal roof. The result? Absenteeism due to diarrhea has dropped considerably, and examination scores soared. “Before we started SODIS, only ten to fifteen percent of the children passed the national sixth grade exams,” says Mhelela, “Now ninety to ninety - five percent of the students pass.” 

(National Geographic, April 2010)
A
fifteen percent of the students passed the national sixth grade exams.
B
only three quarters of the students passed the national sixth grade exams.
C
ten percent of the students passed the national sixth grade exams.
D
the majority of the students passed the national sixth grade exams.
E
less than half of the students passed the national sixth grade exams.
36d1ad25-b7
UEPB 2010 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Text B states that among the results of using SODIS are:

TEXT B

High Marks for Clean Water

     Retrieve a discarded water bottle. Tear off the label and fill it with any water that’s not too murky from a creek, standpipe or a puddle. Place the bottle on a piece of metal in full sun. In six hours the UVA radiation will kill viruses, bacteria and parasites in the water, making it safe to drink.
     SODIS, the acronym for this Swiss - pioneered water - disinfection program, is now being used all over the world to provide drinking water for some four million people. “It’s simple, it’s free, and it’s effective,” says Ibelatha Mhelela, principal of the Ndolela Primary School in Tanzania. In 2006 her school started using SODIS to disinfect its contaminated tap water, placing bottles on the building’s corrugated metal roof. The result? Absenteeism due to diarrhea has dropped considerably, and examination scores soared. “Before we started SODIS, only ten to fifteen percent of the children passed the national sixth grade exams,” says Mhelela, “Now ninety to ninety - five percent of the students pass.” 

(National Geographic, April 2010)
A
better attendance and worse health.
B
better health and lower attendance.
C
lower attendance and worse health.
D
increase in diarrhea among school children.
E
better health and an increase in school attendance.
36cc06b2-b7
UEPB 2010 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

The method of disinfecting water discussed in text B is

TEXT B

High Marks for Clean Water

     Retrieve a discarded water bottle. Tear off the label and fill it with any water that’s not too murky from a creek, standpipe or a puddle. Place the bottle on a piece of metal in full sun. In six hours the UVA radiation will kill viruses, bacteria and parasites in the water, making it safe to drink.
     SODIS, the acronym for this Swiss - pioneered water - disinfection program, is now being used all over the world to provide drinking water for some four million people. “It’s simple, it’s free, and it’s effective,” says Ibelatha Mhelela, principal of the Ndolela Primary School in Tanzania. In 2006 her school started using SODIS to disinfect its contaminated tap water, placing bottles on the building’s corrugated metal roof. The result? Absenteeism due to diarrhea has dropped considerably, and examination scores soared. “Before we started SODIS, only ten to fifteen percent of the children passed the national sixth grade exams,” says Mhelela, “Now ninety to ninety - five percent of the students pass.” 

(National Geographic, April 2010)
A
by filtering the water.
B
by boiling the water.
C
by straining the water.
D
by freezing the water.
E
by using the heat of the sun.
36c24292-b7
UEPB 2010 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

The first sentence of text B is

TEXT B

High Marks for Clean Water

     Retrieve a discarded water bottle. Tear off the label and fill it with any water that’s not too murky from a creek, standpipe or a puddle. Place the bottle on a piece of metal in full sun. In six hours the UVA radiation will kill viruses, bacteria and parasites in the water, making it safe to drink.
     SODIS, the acronym for this Swiss - pioneered water - disinfection program, is now being used all over the world to provide drinking water for some four million people. “It’s simple, it’s free, and it’s effective,” says Ibelatha Mhelela, principal of the Ndolela Primary School in Tanzania. In 2006 her school started using SODIS to disinfect its contaminated tap water, placing bottles on the building’s corrugated metal roof. The result? Absenteeism due to diarrhea has dropped considerably, and examination scores soared. “Before we started SODIS, only ten to fifteen percent of the children passed the national sixth grade exams,” says Mhelela, “Now ninety to ninety - five percent of the students pass.” 

(National Geographic, April 2010)
A
a declaration.
B
a description.
C
a question.
D
an instruction.
E
an affirmation.