Questõesde UNESP sobre Inglês

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Foram encontradas 222 questões
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UNESP 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

No trecho do último parágrafo – aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests –, aimed to indica

Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest


By Channtal Fleischfresser

February 11, 2013



Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli



          Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.

       The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.

         The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.



(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)

A
explicação.
B
finalidade.
C
ênfase.
D
contraste.
E
consequência.
91f71a40-af
UNESP 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

No trecho do último parágrafo – While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed –, a palavra once apresenta uma ideia de

Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest


By Channtal Fleischfresser

February 11, 2013



Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli



          Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.

       The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.

         The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.



(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)

A
passado.
B
condição.
C
futuro.
D
previsão.
E
singularidade.
91ea8c91-af
UNESP 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

O objetivo do Censo Florestal é

Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest


By Channtal Fleischfresser

February 11, 2013



Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli



          Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.

       The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.

         The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.



(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)

A
usar os dados obtidos para criar políticas florestais na América Latina.
B
obter verbas internacionais para implantar programas contra o desmatamento.
C
implantar um inventário florestal em colaboração com países que têm florestas tropicais.
D
conscientizar os povos da floresta sobre a sustentabilidade do meio ambiente.
E
aprimorar a dotação de recursos para as florestas brasileiras.
91ee8dff-af
UNESP 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension, Tradução | Translation

No trecho do primeiro parágrafo – Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon –, a palavra roughly equivale, em português, a

Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest


By Channtal Fleischfresser

February 11, 2013



Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli



          Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.

       The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.

         The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.



(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)

A
evidentemente.
B
exatamente.
C
aquém.
D
além de.
E
cerca de.
91e70dfd-af
UNESP 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

O programa National Forest Inventory

Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest


By Channtal Fleischfresser

February 11, 2013



Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli



          Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.

       The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.

         The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.



(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)

A
fará um registro do número de árvores, bem como de suas características, nos pontos de amostragem.
B
abrirá uma trilha na floresta, com pontos de coleta de dados a cada 20 km.
C
identificou espécies de árvores desconhecidas nas regiões da Amazônia.
D
já contou mais de três mil árvores nos últimos quatro anos.
E
descobriu que a maioria das árvores apresenta altura e diâmetro semelhantes.
91dd919d-af
UNESP 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

O trecho do segundo quadrinho – I’m going to – introduz uma

Instrução: Leia a tira para responder à questão.


(www.hagardunor.net)


A
possibilidade.
B
dúvida.
C
resolução.
D
condição.
E
obrigação.
91e1719d-af
UNESP 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

O Governo brasileiro

Brazil wants to count trees in the Amazon rainforest


By Channtal Fleischfresser

February 11, 2013



Photo: Flickr/Nico Crisafulli



          Brazil is home to roughly 60 percent of the Amazon, about half of what remains of the world’s tropical rainforests. And now, the country has plans to count its trees. A vast undertaking, the new National Forest Inventory hopes to gain “a broad panorama of the quality and the conditions in the forest cover”, according to Brazil’s Forestry Minister Antonio Carlos Hummel.

       The census, set to take place over the next four years, will scour 3,288,000 square miles, sampling 20,000 points at 20 kilometer intervals and registering the number, height, diameter, and species of the trees, among other data.

         The initiative, aimed to better allocate resources to the country’s forests, is part of a large-scale turnaround in Brazil’s relationship to its forests. While it once had one of the worst rates of deforestation in the world, last year only 1,797 square miles of the Amazon were destroyed – a reduction of nearly 80% compared to 2004.



(www.smartplanet.com. Adaptado.)

A
tentará recuperar as áreas desmatadas desde 2004.
B
fará fotografias panorâmicas da floresta para conter o desmatamento.
C
reduzirá o desmatamento legal para apenas 1797 milhas quadradas.
D
fará um censo das árvores da Amazônia brasileira.
E
contará 60% das árvores da floresta amazônica.
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UNESP 2013 - Inglês - Aspectos linguísticos | Linguistic aspects

No trecho do primeiro quadrinho – she’s sick and tired of smelling beer –, ’s pode ser reescrito como

Instrução: Leia a tira para responder à questão.


(www.hagardunor.net)


A
is.
B
was.
C
goes.
D
does.
E
has.
91d0785a-af
UNESP 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

A personagem de barba, Hagar,

Instrução: Leia a tira para responder à questão.


(www.hagardunor.net)


A
quer que Helga, sua esposa, prepare comida condimentada.
B
aprecia petiscos apimentados para acompanhar a cerveja.
C
vai disfarçar o hálito de cerveja com balas de menta.
D
reclamou, pois seu amigo recomendou que ele parasse de beber.
E
vai parar de beber cerveja.
91d4f3da-af
UNESP 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension, Tradução | Translation

A expressão sick and tired no primeiro quadrinho tem sentido equivalente, em português, a

Instrução: Leia a tira para responder à questão.


(www.hagardunor.net)


A
cansada devido à doença.
B
saturada.
C
com enjoo estomacal.
D
doente.
E
embriagada e sonolenta.
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UNESP 2018 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

De acordo com o segundo parágrafo,

Leia o texto para responder às questões


Prescriptions for fighting epidemics 



    Epidemics have plagued humanity since the dawn of settled life. Yet, success in conquering them remains patchy. Experts predict that a global one that could kill more than 300 million people would come round in the next 20 to 40 years. What pathogen would cause it is anybody’s guess. Chances are that it will be a virus that lurks in birds or mammals, or one that that has not yet hatched. The scariest are both highly lethal and spread easily among humans. Thankfully, bugs that excel at the first tend to be weak at the other. But mutations – ordinary business for germs – can change that in a blink. Moreover, when humans get too close to beasts, either wild or packed in farms, an animal disease can become a human one.
    A front-runner for global pandemics is the seasonal influenza virus, which mutates so much that a vaccine must be custom-made every year. The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, which killed 50 million to 100 million people, was a potent version of the “swine flu” that emerged in 2009. The H5N1 “avian flu” strain, deadly in 60% of cases, came about in the 1990s when a virus that sickened birds made the jump to a human. Ebola, HIV and Zika took a similar route.

                                                                                                     (www.economist.com, 08.02.2018. Adaptado.)

A
o vírus H5N1 é uma mutação do vírus HIV.
B
o vírus influenza possui comportamento sazonal, ou seja, é capaz de se espalhar pelos continentes.
C
a gripe suína de 2009 foi muito mais letal que a gripe espanhola de 1918.
D
os vírus Ebola, HIV e Zika passaram a contaminar os seres humanos.
E
um vírus só é considerado perigoso se sua letalidade superar 60% dos casos de contaminação.
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UNESP 2018 - Inglês - Vocabulário | Vocabulary, Sinônimos | Synonyms

No trecho do primeiro parágrafo “Yet, success in conquering them remains patchy”, o termo sublinhado equivale, em português, a

Leia o texto para responder às questões


Prescriptions for fighting epidemics 



    Epidemics have plagued humanity since the dawn of settled life. Yet, success in conquering them remains patchy. Experts predict that a global one that could kill more than 300 million people would come round in the next 20 to 40 years. What pathogen would cause it is anybody’s guess. Chances are that it will be a virus that lurks in birds or mammals, or one that that has not yet hatched. The scariest are both highly lethal and spread easily among humans. Thankfully, bugs that excel at the first tend to be weak at the other. But mutations – ordinary business for germs – can change that in a blink. Moreover, when humans get too close to beasts, either wild or packed in farms, an animal disease can become a human one.
    A front-runner for global pandemics is the seasonal influenza virus, which mutates so much that a vaccine must be custom-made every year. The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, which killed 50 million to 100 million people, was a potent version of the “swine flu” that emerged in 2009. The H5N1 “avian flu” strain, deadly in 60% of cases, came about in the 1990s when a virus that sickened birds made the jump to a human. Ebola, HIV and Zika took a similar route.

                                                                                                     (www.economist.com, 08.02.2018. Adaptado.)

A
assim mesmo.
B
portanto.
C
além disso.
D
ao invés disso.
E
no entanto.
ff49baf7-0a
UNESP 2018 - Inglês - Vocabulário | Vocabulary

No trecho do primeiro parágrafo “Moreover, when humans get too close to beasts”, o termo sublinhado indica

Leia o texto para responder às questões


Prescriptions for fighting epidemics 



    Epidemics have plagued humanity since the dawn of settled life. Yet, success in conquering them remains patchy. Experts predict that a global one that could kill more than 300 million people would come round in the next 20 to 40 years. What pathogen would cause it is anybody’s guess. Chances are that it will be a virus that lurks in birds or mammals, or one that that has not yet hatched. The scariest are both highly lethal and spread easily among humans. Thankfully, bugs that excel at the first tend to be weak at the other. But mutations – ordinary business for germs – can change that in a blink. Moreover, when humans get too close to beasts, either wild or packed in farms, an animal disease can become a human one.
    A front-runner for global pandemics is the seasonal influenza virus, which mutates so much that a vaccine must be custom-made every year. The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, which killed 50 million to 100 million people, was a potent version of the “swine flu” that emerged in 2009. The H5N1 “avian flu” strain, deadly in 60% of cases, came about in the 1990s when a virus that sickened birds made the jump to a human. Ebola, HIV and Zika took a similar route.

                                                                                                     (www.economist.com, 08.02.2018. Adaptado.)

A
acréscimo.
B
decorrência.
C
comparação.
D
condição.
E
finalidade.
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UNESP 2018 - Inglês - Vocabulário | Vocabulary, Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

No trecho do primeiro parágrafo “can change that in a blink”, a expressão sublinhada tem sentido de

Leia o texto para responder às questões


Prescriptions for fighting epidemics 



    Epidemics have plagued humanity since the dawn of settled life. Yet, success in conquering them remains patchy. Experts predict that a global one that could kill more than 300 million people would come round in the next 20 to 40 years. What pathogen would cause it is anybody’s guess. Chances are that it will be a virus that lurks in birds or mammals, or one that that has not yet hatched. The scariest are both highly lethal and spread easily among humans. Thankfully, bugs that excel at the first tend to be weak at the other. But mutations – ordinary business for germs – can change that in a blink. Moreover, when humans get too close to beasts, either wild or packed in farms, an animal disease can become a human one.
    A front-runner for global pandemics is the seasonal influenza virus, which mutates so much that a vaccine must be custom-made every year. The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, which killed 50 million to 100 million people, was a potent version of the “swine flu” that emerged in 2009. The H5N1 “avian flu” strain, deadly in 60% of cases, came about in the 1990s when a virus that sickened birds made the jump to a human. Ebola, HIV and Zika took a similar route.

                                                                                                     (www.economist.com, 08.02.2018. Adaptado.)

A
confiança.
B
previsibilidade.
C
expectativa.
D
desalento.
E
rapidez.
ff34f7e5-0a
UNESP 2018 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

The Atlantic Slave Trade, 1731-1775


Based on the information presented by the map, one can say that, from 1731 to 1775,

A
the majority of enslaved Africans were taken to the British and French Caribbean colonies.
B
enslaved Africans from Senegambia were mainly smuggled to Brazil.
C
a great part of enslaved Africans were forced to work in other African regions.
D
most enslaved Africans from West Central Africa were taken to British colonies in the Caribbean.
E
the northern region of the Americas, colonized by the British, received more enslaved Africans than the south.
ff3f16b2-0a
UNESP 2018 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

De acordo com o texto, os especialistas

Leia o texto para responder às questões


Prescriptions for fighting epidemics 



    Epidemics have plagued humanity since the dawn of settled life. Yet, success in conquering them remains patchy. Experts predict that a global one that could kill more than 300 million people would come round in the next 20 to 40 years. What pathogen would cause it is anybody’s guess. Chances are that it will be a virus that lurks in birds or mammals, or one that that has not yet hatched. The scariest are both highly lethal and spread easily among humans. Thankfully, bugs that excel at the first tend to be weak at the other. But mutations – ordinary business for germs – can change that in a blink. Moreover, when humans get too close to beasts, either wild or packed in farms, an animal disease can become a human one.
    A front-runner for global pandemics is the seasonal influenza virus, which mutates so much that a vaccine must be custom-made every year. The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, which killed 50 million to 100 million people, was a potent version of the “swine flu” that emerged in 2009. The H5N1 “avian flu” strain, deadly in 60% of cases, came about in the 1990s when a virus that sickened birds made the jump to a human. Ebola, HIV and Zika took a similar route.

                                                                                                     (www.economist.com, 08.02.2018. Adaptado.)

A
pressupõem que haverá uma pandemia futura, ainda sem patógeno identificado.
B
identificaram o vírus que poderá matar mais de 300 milhões de pessoas.
C
presumem que vacinas sejam capazes de conter epidemias, ainda que sem evidências.
D
acreditam que os vírus mais letais não são transmitidos para os humanos.
E
estão criando patógenos mutantes em laboratórios para produzir vacinas.
ff384eca-0a
UNESP 2018 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

De acordo com o primeiro parágrafo,

Leia o texto para responder às questões


Prescriptions for fighting epidemics 



    Epidemics have plagued humanity since the dawn of settled life. Yet, success in conquering them remains patchy. Experts predict that a global one that could kill more than 300 million people would come round in the next 20 to 40 years. What pathogen would cause it is anybody’s guess. Chances are that it will be a virus that lurks in birds or mammals, or one that that has not yet hatched. The scariest are both highly lethal and spread easily among humans. Thankfully, bugs that excel at the first tend to be weak at the other. But mutations – ordinary business for germs – can change that in a blink. Moreover, when humans get too close to beasts, either wild or packed in farms, an animal disease can become a human one.
    A front-runner for global pandemics is the seasonal influenza virus, which mutates so much that a vaccine must be custom-made every year. The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, which killed 50 million to 100 million people, was a potent version of the “swine flu” that emerged in 2009. The H5N1 “avian flu” strain, deadly in 60% of cases, came about in the 1990s when a virus that sickened birds made the jump to a human. Ebola, HIV and Zika took a similar route.

                                                                                                     (www.economist.com, 08.02.2018. Adaptado.)

A
há perspectivas de erradicar as epidemias nos próximos 40 anos.
B
as epidemias assolaram principalmente os povos ancestrais nômades.
C
as mutações que os germes sofrem geralmente atenuam a sua letalidade.
D
doenças presentes em animais e aves podem se transformar em doenças humanas.
E
as aves são as principais transmissoras de patógenos, devido à sua mobilidade.
ff3b8027-0a
UNESP 2018 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

No trecho do primeiro parágrafo “or one that that has not yet hatched”, o termo sublinhado refere-se a

Leia o texto para responder às questões


Prescriptions for fighting epidemics 



    Epidemics have plagued humanity since the dawn of settled life. Yet, success in conquering them remains patchy. Experts predict that a global one that could kill more than 300 million people would come round in the next 20 to 40 years. What pathogen would cause it is anybody’s guess. Chances are that it will be a virus that lurks in birds or mammals, or one that that has not yet hatched. The scariest are both highly lethal and spread easily among humans. Thankfully, bugs that excel at the first tend to be weak at the other. But mutations – ordinary business for germs – can change that in a blink. Moreover, when humans get too close to beasts, either wild or packed in farms, an animal disease can become a human one.
    A front-runner for global pandemics is the seasonal influenza virus, which mutates so much that a vaccine must be custom-made every year. The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, which killed 50 million to 100 million people, was a potent version of the “swine flu” that emerged in 2009. The H5N1 “avian flu” strain, deadly in 60% of cases, came about in the 1990s when a virus that sickened birds made the jump to a human. Ebola, HIV and Zika took a similar route.

                                                                                                     (www.economist.com, 08.02.2018. Adaptado.)

A
mutation.
B
virus.
C
mammals.
D
epidemic.
E
birds.
ff3175a8-0a
UNESP 2018 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

A obra Antropofagia (“Cannibalism”) de Tarsila do Amaral, apresentada na imagem, é interpretada pelo autor do artigo como

Leia o trecho do artigo de Jason Farago, publicado pelo jornal The New York Times, para responder às questões


She led Latin American Art in a bold new direction 


    In 1928, Tarsila do Amaral painted Abaporu, a landmark work of Brazilian Modernism, in which a nude figure, half-human and half-animal, looks down at his massive, swollen foot, several times the size of his head. Abaporu inspired Tarsila’s husband at the time, the poet Oswald de Andrade, to write his celebrated “Cannibal Manifesto,” which flayed Brazil’s belletrist writers and called for an embrace of local influences – in fact, for a devouring of them. The European stereotype of native Brazilians as cannibals would be reformatted as a cultural virtue. More than a social and literary reform movement, cannibalism would form the basis for a new Brazilian nationalism, in which, as de Andrade wrote, “we made Christ to be born in Bahia.” 

    The unconventional nudes of A Negra, a painting produced in 1923, and Abaporu unite in Tarsila’s final great painting, Antropofagia, a marriage of two figures that is also a marriage of Old World and New. The couple sit entangled, her breast drooping over his knee, their giant feet crossed one over the other, while, behind them, a banana leaf grows as large as a cactus. The sun, high above the primordial couple, is a wedge of lemon.


(Jason Farago. www.nytimes.com, 15.02.2018. Adaptado.)

A
o casamento tradicional entre um homem e uma mulher.
B
uma referência aos trabalhadores rurais, evidenciados pelo tamanho dos pés.
C
a agrura implacável da natureza, representada pelo Sol sobre o sertão.
D
uma expressão de contraste entre a suavidade da bananeira e os espinhos do cacto mandacaru.
E
uma mistura entre a Europa e a América.
ff264134-0a
UNESP 2018 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

A apresentação refere-se à pintura:

Entre 11 de fevereiro e 03 de junho de 2018, o Museu de Arte Moderna de Nova Iorque (MoMA) abrigou a primeira exposição nos Estados Unidos dedicada à pintora brasileira Tarsila do Amaral. Leia a apresentação de uma das pinturas expostas para responder às questões


The painting Sleep (1928) is a dreamlike representation of tropical landscape, with this major motif of her repetitive figure that disappears in the background.

This painting is an example of Tarsila’s venture into surrealism. Elements such as repetition, random association, and dreamlike figures are typical of surrealism that we can see as main elements of this composition. She was never a truly surrealist painter, but she was totally aware of surrealism’s legacy.


(www.moma.org. Adaptado.)

A


B


C


D


E