Questõesde UECE 2013

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Foram encontradas 502 questões
d43e30bc-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Interpretação de Textos

“Il s’agit bien de ça, être libre, au coeur d’un désert ou au fond de l’océan, être libre.” (lignes 51 à 53)

À propos de cette phrase, on peut dire que la liberté est


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
par principe intangible.
B
si importante que le coeur d’un désert.
C
désirée où qu’elle soit.
D
aussi profonde que l’océan.
d4251a00-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Interpretação de Textos

La phrase qui exprime la même valeur notionnelle de conséquence dans l’extrait du texte "... je me sentais enchaîné à un pieu invisible, si solidement enchaîné que l’immobilité totale devenait le choix de la sagesse.” (lignes 15 à 18) est


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
Je me demandais si toutes leurs attitudes auraient cette aura de mystère peureux.
B
S’il faisait beau, toute la famille partirait ensemble à la recherche de l’aventure.
C
Si indifférente qu’elle paraisse, elle est très disponible quand on a besoin d’elle.
D
Il est toujours si brillant qu’il s’impose sans difficulté partout où il se trouve.
d427d1fe-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Gramática

Le référent conrrespondant au pronom anaphorique "dont" (ligne 4) est


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
des chemins.
B
la solitude.
C
le désert.
D
la boussole.
d42aa1aa-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Interpretação de Textos

Avec la phrase “Alors donc, l’enfer ce ne serait plus les autres, mais moi-même.” (lignes 21 à 23), l’auteur s’oppose à la célèbre phrase de Sartre, un philosophe français du XXe. siècle qui a dit: “L’enfer, c’est les autres”. Dans le texte, le sens du mot “enfer” est


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
mon vis-à-vis perdu.
B
un désert habité.
C
notre chemin d’amour.
D
le coeur sans tendresse.
d416be4d-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Interpretação de Textos

Deux idées opposées marquent les décisions de l’auteur dans le premier paragraphe par les expressions


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
immobilité totale et inventer un chemin.
B
silence de ma voix et le choix de la sagesse.
C
solidement enchaîné et univers habité.
D
comme menace et rester planté.
d41a8f8c-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Interpretação de Textos

Avec la première phrase du texte l’auteur


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
présente le contexte de la situation qu’il va exploiter.
B
fait une comparaison entre un désert et une ambiance hostile.
C
montre au lecteur un chemin textuel à ne pas suivre.
D
commence le texte par un argument qu’il va refuter.
d4228b65-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Interpretação de Textos

Les idées finales du texte adressent une leçon à l’humanité par le fait que/qu’


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
ce qui justifie la liberté chez l’homme est sa possibilité d’être plus humain.
B
être juste signifie être responsable vis-à-vis de soi même et vis-à-vis des autres.
C
l’homme doit concevoir le monde comme un désert avec mille chemins.
D
l’humanité envisage plusieurs défis et plusieurs pistes pour atteindre la liberté.
d413d2f7-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Interpretação de Textos

L’état d’esprit de l’auteur s’explique le mieux par


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
l’impossibilité de réagir à cause de sa fragilité par rapport à un amour perdu.
B
le plaisir de se trouver sans écho humain après s’être échappé de ses problèmes.
C
la difficulté de rencontrer la liberté en soimême et dans les autres.
D
la jouissance de sortir de son vis-à-vis.
d41d3f43-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Interpretação de Textos

Par rapport au thème du texte, les expressions "vaste désert” et “sans boussole” (ligne 2) répresentent


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
la solitude de l’auteur.
B
les possibilités de s’en fuir.
C
l’abandon dès l’enfance.
D
l’ angoisse de se rencontrer.
d41ff151-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Interpretação de Textos

Les expressions "la pire angoisse, l’enfant abandonné, les ténèbres" (lignes 7 et 8) avec lesquelles l’auteur définit ce sentiment de "vide si plein" (ligne 6) qui l’envahit ont toutes un trait sémique commun qui relève de la/l’


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
euphorie.
B
spatialité.
C
dysphorie.
D
temporalité.
d410c181-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Interpretação de Textos

Le sentiment de l’auteur qui se répand dans tout le texte est


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
la joie.
B
l’inquiétude.
C
l’apaisement.
D
l’espoir.
d40ca39d-b8
UECE 2013 - Outros Idiomas - Francês - Interpretação de Textos

À partir du titre du texte, l’auteur annonce qu’il va employer dans le texte l’expression “vis-à-vis” pour


Adaptét de Dis-moi dix mots semés au loin,

Sami Tchak, 2013.


Après la lecture attentive du texte, réponde aux question suivante. 

A
examiner sa fonction grammaticale.
B
refuter un nouveau sens de cette expression.
C
montrer des spécificités sémantiques concernant cette expression.
D
présenter une nouvelle manière d’analyser une expression grammaticale.
86ed567b-c6
UECE 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Pope Francis’ optimism could be seen in Varginha, where he told people to

TEXT



    RIO DE JANEIRO — Pope Francis on Thursday delivered some of his most politically provocative remarks since his papacy began this year, hopping from his popemobile to walk through a slum in this city before urging young people to fight against corruption, a leading grievance behind the huge street protests that shook dozens of Brazilian cities in June.
    “Do not grow accustomed to evil, but defeat it,” Francis said at the favela, or slum, of Varginha, in an area that has commonly been known here as the Gaza Strip for its gun battles and drug trafficking in the past. “Do not lose trust, do not allow your hope to be extinguished,” he added, acknowledging that it was common for some to “grow disillusioned with news of corruption.”
    By singling out corruption in a folksy visit to a Brazilian favela on his first trip abroad as pope, Francis, an Argentine-born Jesuit, emphasized his aim to refocus the Roman Catholic Church on the neglected margins of society, especially in Brazil and other parts of Latin America where the popularity of evangelical churches has surged among the poor in recent decades.
    In a nod to the Brazilian political authorities who have warmly welcomed him, Francis also praised the government’s antipoverty programs and did not specifically mention the anti-establishment protests in Brazil. But he did critique Rio de Janeiro’s so-called pacification project in the city’s slums, in which security forces assert control over lawless areas.
    “No amount of pacification will be able to last, nor will harmony and happiness be attained in a society that ignores, pushes to the margins or excludes a part of itself,” the pope said in Varginha, a slum that has recently been subjected to pacification. In a remark that could resonate in Latin America and in the United States, which is also grappling with the widening disparity between the haves and the have-nots, Francis said that a society “impoverishes itself” by perpetuating such inequality.
    Care for the poor and marginalized is an integral part of Catholic teaching, and a concern of many popes and encyclicals, including those by Francis’ predecessor, Benedict XVI. But Francis has made it a hallmark of his young papacy, telling journalists in Rome days after his election, “How I would like a church that is poor and for the poor.” He has demonstrated that ideal by living relatively humbly as pope: in a communal guesthouse rather than the opulent papal apartment, wearing a pectoral cross of iron instead of gold, flying commercial. He recently told priests that they should not drive fancy cars, and he has traveled around Rio this week in a compact Fiat.
    “He is helping to wake people up,” said Natalia Morais, 21, a nursing student from Minas Gerais State who traveled to Rio to see the pope as part of World Youth Day, a conference attended by hundreds of thousands of Catholic youth. “When the pope talks, political leaders listen, and that’s what’s needed in Brazil, where our protests are about their corruption,” Ms. Morais said.
    Reaching beyond Brazil, Francis told Argentines who came here for the conference that “the church must be taken into the streets” in a struggle against complacency. “Stir things up, cause confounding, but do not diminish faith in Jesus Christ,” he said in Spanish.
    In each of Francis’ public appearances, he has been accorded a rock-star reception. On an uncommonly cold and rainy morning, hundreds of residents lined the narrow, muddy sidewalks of the Varginha favela to glimpse the first pope from the Americas, who obliged by stopping often to touch and bless people.
    Many onlookers had made their own shirts to commemorate the event, with a photo of Francis. Others draped themselves in Brazilian flags and waved banners bearing his image. Residents darted in and out of their homes, checking their televisions and radios to learn the pope’s whereabouts and calling the information out to their neighbors standing on wet rooftops to get a better view.
    Sônia Curato, 48, a manicurist, said the pope’s visit was different from that of other leaders. “Politicians come all the time. They make promises and leave,” she said. “He is a very simple person. You can tell that. He has charisma. He speaks to the people, doesn’t like going around in an armored car.”


By Simon Romero and Taylor Barnes
Published: July 25, 2013
www.nytimes.com

A
support security forces.
B
keep their trust and hope.
C
say the Hail Mary every day.
D
get used to the way things are.
86f2441d-c6
UECE 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

In his speech in Varginha, Pope Francis mentioned that one of his aims in the Papacy is 

TEXT



    RIO DE JANEIRO — Pope Francis on Thursday delivered some of his most politically provocative remarks since his papacy began this year, hopping from his popemobile to walk through a slum in this city before urging young people to fight against corruption, a leading grievance behind the huge street protests that shook dozens of Brazilian cities in June.
    “Do not grow accustomed to evil, but defeat it,” Francis said at the favela, or slum, of Varginha, in an area that has commonly been known here as the Gaza Strip for its gun battles and drug trafficking in the past. “Do not lose trust, do not allow your hope to be extinguished,” he added, acknowledging that it was common for some to “grow disillusioned with news of corruption.”
    By singling out corruption in a folksy visit to a Brazilian favela on his first trip abroad as pope, Francis, an Argentine-born Jesuit, emphasized his aim to refocus the Roman Catholic Church on the neglected margins of society, especially in Brazil and other parts of Latin America where the popularity of evangelical churches has surged among the poor in recent decades.
    In a nod to the Brazilian political authorities who have warmly welcomed him, Francis also praised the government’s antipoverty programs and did not specifically mention the anti-establishment protests in Brazil. But he did critique Rio de Janeiro’s so-called pacification project in the city’s slums, in which security forces assert control over lawless areas.
    “No amount of pacification will be able to last, nor will harmony and happiness be attained in a society that ignores, pushes to the margins or excludes a part of itself,” the pope said in Varginha, a slum that has recently been subjected to pacification. In a remark that could resonate in Latin America and in the United States, which is also grappling with the widening disparity between the haves and the have-nots, Francis said that a society “impoverishes itself” by perpetuating such inequality.
    Care for the poor and marginalized is an integral part of Catholic teaching, and a concern of many popes and encyclicals, including those by Francis’ predecessor, Benedict XVI. But Francis has made it a hallmark of his young papacy, telling journalists in Rome days after his election, “How I would like a church that is poor and for the poor.” He has demonstrated that ideal by living relatively humbly as pope: in a communal guesthouse rather than the opulent papal apartment, wearing a pectoral cross of iron instead of gold, flying commercial. He recently told priests that they should not drive fancy cars, and he has traveled around Rio this week in a compact Fiat.
    “He is helping to wake people up,” said Natalia Morais, 21, a nursing student from Minas Gerais State who traveled to Rio to see the pope as part of World Youth Day, a conference attended by hundreds of thousands of Catholic youth. “When the pope talks, political leaders listen, and that’s what’s needed in Brazil, where our protests are about their corruption,” Ms. Morais said.
    Reaching beyond Brazil, Francis told Argentines who came here for the conference that “the church must be taken into the streets” in a struggle against complacency. “Stir things up, cause confounding, but do not diminish faith in Jesus Christ,” he said in Spanish.
    In each of Francis’ public appearances, he has been accorded a rock-star reception. On an uncommonly cold and rainy morning, hundreds of residents lined the narrow, muddy sidewalks of the Varginha favela to glimpse the first pope from the Americas, who obliged by stopping often to touch and bless people.
    Many onlookers had made their own shirts to commemorate the event, with a photo of Francis. Others draped themselves in Brazilian flags and waved banners bearing his image. Residents darted in and out of their homes, checking their televisions and radios to learn the pope’s whereabouts and calling the information out to their neighbors standing on wet rooftops to get a better view.
    Sônia Curato, 48, a manicurist, said the pope’s visit was different from that of other leaders. “Politicians come all the time. They make promises and leave,” she said. “He is a very simple person. You can tell that. He has charisma. He speaks to the people, doesn’t like going around in an armored car.”


By Simon Romero and Taylor Barnes
Published: July 25, 2013
www.nytimes.com

A
refocusing the Roman Catholic Church on the forgotten part of society.
B
bringing more children to Catholic schools.
C
building more communal guesthouses in the Vatican.
D
extinguishing gun-battles in the Gaza Strip.
86e92ecf-c6
UECE 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Some of the things the Pope has done that show he is trying to keep humble are

TEXT



    RIO DE JANEIRO — Pope Francis on Thursday delivered some of his most politically provocative remarks since his papacy began this year, hopping from his popemobile to walk through a slum in this city before urging young people to fight against corruption, a leading grievance behind the huge street protests that shook dozens of Brazilian cities in June.
    “Do not grow accustomed to evil, but defeat it,” Francis said at the favela, or slum, of Varginha, in an area that has commonly been known here as the Gaza Strip for its gun battles and drug trafficking in the past. “Do not lose trust, do not allow your hope to be extinguished,” he added, acknowledging that it was common for some to “grow disillusioned with news of corruption.”
    By singling out corruption in a folksy visit to a Brazilian favela on his first trip abroad as pope, Francis, an Argentine-born Jesuit, emphasized his aim to refocus the Roman Catholic Church on the neglected margins of society, especially in Brazil and other parts of Latin America where the popularity of evangelical churches has surged among the poor in recent decades.
    In a nod to the Brazilian political authorities who have warmly welcomed him, Francis also praised the government’s antipoverty programs and did not specifically mention the anti-establishment protests in Brazil. But he did critique Rio de Janeiro’s so-called pacification project in the city’s slums, in which security forces assert control over lawless areas.
    “No amount of pacification will be able to last, nor will harmony and happiness be attained in a society that ignores, pushes to the margins or excludes a part of itself,” the pope said in Varginha, a slum that has recently been subjected to pacification. In a remark that could resonate in Latin America and in the United States, which is also grappling with the widening disparity between the haves and the have-nots, Francis said that a society “impoverishes itself” by perpetuating such inequality.
    Care for the poor and marginalized is an integral part of Catholic teaching, and a concern of many popes and encyclicals, including those by Francis’ predecessor, Benedict XVI. But Francis has made it a hallmark of his young papacy, telling journalists in Rome days after his election, “How I would like a church that is poor and for the poor.” He has demonstrated that ideal by living relatively humbly as pope: in a communal guesthouse rather than the opulent papal apartment, wearing a pectoral cross of iron instead of gold, flying commercial. He recently told priests that they should not drive fancy cars, and he has traveled around Rio this week in a compact Fiat.
    “He is helping to wake people up,” said Natalia Morais, 21, a nursing student from Minas Gerais State who traveled to Rio to see the pope as part of World Youth Day, a conference attended by hundreds of thousands of Catholic youth. “When the pope talks, political leaders listen, and that’s what’s needed in Brazil, where our protests are about their corruption,” Ms. Morais said.
    Reaching beyond Brazil, Francis told Argentines who came here for the conference that “the church must be taken into the streets” in a struggle against complacency. “Stir things up, cause confounding, but do not diminish faith in Jesus Christ,” he said in Spanish.
    In each of Francis’ public appearances, he has been accorded a rock-star reception. On an uncommonly cold and rainy morning, hundreds of residents lined the narrow, muddy sidewalks of the Varginha favela to glimpse the first pope from the Americas, who obliged by stopping often to touch and bless people.
    Many onlookers had made their own shirts to commemorate the event, with a photo of Francis. Others draped themselves in Brazilian flags and waved banners bearing his image. Residents darted in and out of their homes, checking their televisions and radios to learn the pope’s whereabouts and calling the information out to their neighbors standing on wet rooftops to get a better view.
    Sônia Curato, 48, a manicurist, said the pope’s visit was different from that of other leaders. “Politicians come all the time. They make promises and leave,” she said. “He is a very simple person. You can tell that. He has charisma. He speaks to the people, doesn’t like going around in an armored car.”


By Simon Romero and Taylor Barnes
Published: July 25, 2013
www.nytimes.com

A
helping nursing students and living in a modest apartment.
B
 B) waking up very early and preaching to political leaders.
C
not wearing a golden cross and flying commercial.
D
praising anti-poverty programs and riding buses
86e43421-c6
UECE 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

When he met with Argentines, the Pope mentioned that besides stirring things up, they should

TEXT



    RIO DE JANEIRO — Pope Francis on Thursday delivered some of his most politically provocative remarks since his papacy began this year, hopping from his popemobile to walk through a slum in this city before urging young people to fight against corruption, a leading grievance behind the huge street protests that shook dozens of Brazilian cities in June.
    “Do not grow accustomed to evil, but defeat it,” Francis said at the favela, or slum, of Varginha, in an area that has commonly been known here as the Gaza Strip for its gun battles and drug trafficking in the past. “Do not lose trust, do not allow your hope to be extinguished,” he added, acknowledging that it was common for some to “grow disillusioned with news of corruption.”
    By singling out corruption in a folksy visit to a Brazilian favela on his first trip abroad as pope, Francis, an Argentine-born Jesuit, emphasized his aim to refocus the Roman Catholic Church on the neglected margins of society, especially in Brazil and other parts of Latin America where the popularity of evangelical churches has surged among the poor in recent decades.
    In a nod to the Brazilian political authorities who have warmly welcomed him, Francis also praised the government’s antipoverty programs and did not specifically mention the anti-establishment protests in Brazil. But he did critique Rio de Janeiro’s so-called pacification project in the city’s slums, in which security forces assert control over lawless areas.
    “No amount of pacification will be able to last, nor will harmony and happiness be attained in a society that ignores, pushes to the margins or excludes a part of itself,” the pope said in Varginha, a slum that has recently been subjected to pacification. In a remark that could resonate in Latin America and in the United States, which is also grappling with the widening disparity between the haves and the have-nots, Francis said that a society “impoverishes itself” by perpetuating such inequality.
    Care for the poor and marginalized is an integral part of Catholic teaching, and a concern of many popes and encyclicals, including those by Francis’ predecessor, Benedict XVI. But Francis has made it a hallmark of his young papacy, telling journalists in Rome days after his election, “How I would like a church that is poor and for the poor.” He has demonstrated that ideal by living relatively humbly as pope: in a communal guesthouse rather than the opulent papal apartment, wearing a pectoral cross of iron instead of gold, flying commercial. He recently told priests that they should not drive fancy cars, and he has traveled around Rio this week in a compact Fiat.
    “He is helping to wake people up,” said Natalia Morais, 21, a nursing student from Minas Gerais State who traveled to Rio to see the pope as part of World Youth Day, a conference attended by hundreds of thousands of Catholic youth. “When the pope talks, political leaders listen, and that’s what’s needed in Brazil, where our protests are about their corruption,” Ms. Morais said.
    Reaching beyond Brazil, Francis told Argentines who came here for the conference that “the church must be taken into the streets” in a struggle against complacency. “Stir things up, cause confounding, but do not diminish faith in Jesus Christ,” he said in Spanish.
    In each of Francis’ public appearances, he has been accorded a rock-star reception. On an uncommonly cold and rainy morning, hundreds of residents lined the narrow, muddy sidewalks of the Varginha favela to glimpse the first pope from the Americas, who obliged by stopping often to touch and bless people.
    Many onlookers had made their own shirts to commemorate the event, with a photo of Francis. Others draped themselves in Brazilian flags and waved banners bearing his image. Residents darted in and out of their homes, checking their televisions and radios to learn the pope’s whereabouts and calling the information out to their neighbors standing on wet rooftops to get a better view.
    Sônia Curato, 48, a manicurist, said the pope’s visit was different from that of other leaders. “Politicians come all the time. They make promises and leave,” she said. “He is a very simple person. You can tell that. He has charisma. He speaks to the people, doesn’t like going around in an armored car.”


By Simon Romero and Taylor Barnes
Published: July 25, 2013
www.nytimes.com

A
remember Jesus’ resurrection.
B
be more engaged in politics.
C
not care too much about material wealth.
D
keep their faith in Jesus Christ.
86d93283-c6
UECE 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

One of the ways through which Pope Francis has shown he is not like his predecessors is the fact that he defends that

TEXT



    RIO DE JANEIRO — Pope Francis on Thursday delivered some of his most politically provocative remarks since his papacy began this year, hopping from his popemobile to walk through a slum in this city before urging young people to fight against corruption, a leading grievance behind the huge street protests that shook dozens of Brazilian cities in June.
    “Do not grow accustomed to evil, but defeat it,” Francis said at the favela, or slum, of Varginha, in an area that has commonly been known here as the Gaza Strip for its gun battles and drug trafficking in the past. “Do not lose trust, do not allow your hope to be extinguished,” he added, acknowledging that it was common for some to “grow disillusioned with news of corruption.”
    By singling out corruption in a folksy visit to a Brazilian favela on his first trip abroad as pope, Francis, an Argentine-born Jesuit, emphasized his aim to refocus the Roman Catholic Church on the neglected margins of society, especially in Brazil and other parts of Latin America where the popularity of evangelical churches has surged among the poor in recent decades.
    In a nod to the Brazilian political authorities who have warmly welcomed him, Francis also praised the government’s antipoverty programs and did not specifically mention the anti-establishment protests in Brazil. But he did critique Rio de Janeiro’s so-called pacification project in the city’s slums, in which security forces assert control over lawless areas.
    “No amount of pacification will be able to last, nor will harmony and happiness be attained in a society that ignores, pushes to the margins or excludes a part of itself,” the pope said in Varginha, a slum that has recently been subjected to pacification. In a remark that could resonate in Latin America and in the United States, which is also grappling with the widening disparity between the haves and the have-nots, Francis said that a society “impoverishes itself” by perpetuating such inequality.
    Care for the poor and marginalized is an integral part of Catholic teaching, and a concern of many popes and encyclicals, including those by Francis’ predecessor, Benedict XVI. But Francis has made it a hallmark of his young papacy, telling journalists in Rome days after his election, “How I would like a church that is poor and for the poor.” He has demonstrated that ideal by living relatively humbly as pope: in a communal guesthouse rather than the opulent papal apartment, wearing a pectoral cross of iron instead of gold, flying commercial. He recently told priests that they should not drive fancy cars, and he has traveled around Rio this week in a compact Fiat.
    “He is helping to wake people up,” said Natalia Morais, 21, a nursing student from Minas Gerais State who traveled to Rio to see the pope as part of World Youth Day, a conference attended by hundreds of thousands of Catholic youth. “When the pope talks, political leaders listen, and that’s what’s needed in Brazil, where our protests are about their corruption,” Ms. Morais said.
    Reaching beyond Brazil, Francis told Argentines who came here for the conference that “the church must be taken into the streets” in a struggle against complacency. “Stir things up, cause confounding, but do not diminish faith in Jesus Christ,” he said in Spanish.
    In each of Francis’ public appearances, he has been accorded a rock-star reception. On an uncommonly cold and rainy morning, hundreds of residents lined the narrow, muddy sidewalks of the Varginha favela to glimpse the first pope from the Americas, who obliged by stopping often to touch and bless people.
    Many onlookers had made their own shirts to commemorate the event, with a photo of Francis. Others draped themselves in Brazilian flags and waved banners bearing his image. Residents darted in and out of their homes, checking their televisions and radios to learn the pope’s whereabouts and calling the information out to their neighbors standing on wet rooftops to get a better view.
    Sônia Curato, 48, a manicurist, said the pope’s visit was different from that of other leaders. “Politicians come all the time. They make promises and leave,” she said. “He is a very simple person. You can tell that. He has charisma. He speaks to the people, doesn’t like going around in an armored car.”


By Simon Romero and Taylor Barnes
Published: July 25, 2013
www.nytimes.com

A
the church should be poor and care for the poor.
B
drug trafficking must be eradicated.
C
all Brazilian slums should go through the pacification project.
D
this century should see a majority of Catholics in all countries.
86dd95ca-c6
UECE 2013 - Inglês - Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension

Pope Francis criticized the pacification project because he believes

TEXT



    RIO DE JANEIRO — Pope Francis on Thursday delivered some of his most politically provocative remarks since his papacy began this year, hopping from his popemobile to walk through a slum in this city before urging young people to fight against corruption, a leading grievance behind the huge street protests that shook dozens of Brazilian cities in June.
    “Do not grow accustomed to evil, but defeat it,” Francis said at the favela, or slum, of Varginha, in an area that has commonly been known here as the Gaza Strip for its gun battles and drug trafficking in the past. “Do not lose trust, do not allow your hope to be extinguished,” he added, acknowledging that it was common for some to “grow disillusioned with news of corruption.”
    By singling out corruption in a folksy visit to a Brazilian favela on his first trip abroad as pope, Francis, an Argentine-born Jesuit, emphasized his aim to refocus the Roman Catholic Church on the neglected margins of society, especially in Brazil and other parts of Latin America where the popularity of evangelical churches has surged among the poor in recent decades.
    In a nod to the Brazilian political authorities who have warmly welcomed him, Francis also praised the government’s antipoverty programs and did not specifically mention the anti-establishment protests in Brazil. But he did critique Rio de Janeiro’s so-called pacification project in the city’s slums, in which security forces assert control over lawless areas.
    “No amount of pacification will be able to last, nor will harmony and happiness be attained in a society that ignores, pushes to the margins or excludes a part of itself,” the pope said in Varginha, a slum that has recently been subjected to pacification. In a remark that could resonate in Latin America and in the United States, which is also grappling with the widening disparity between the haves and the have-nots, Francis said that a society “impoverishes itself” by perpetuating such inequality.
    Care for the poor and marginalized is an integral part of Catholic teaching, and a concern of many popes and encyclicals, including those by Francis’ predecessor, Benedict XVI. But Francis has made it a hallmark of his young papacy, telling journalists in Rome days after his election, “How I would like a church that is poor and for the poor.” He has demonstrated that ideal by living relatively humbly as pope: in a communal guesthouse rather than the opulent papal apartment, wearing a pectoral cross of iron instead of gold, flying commercial. He recently told priests that they should not drive fancy cars, and he has traveled around Rio this week in a compact Fiat.
    “He is helping to wake people up,” said Natalia Morais, 21, a nursing student from Minas Gerais State who traveled to Rio to see the pope as part of World Youth Day, a conference attended by hundreds of thousands of Catholic youth. “When the pope talks, political leaders listen, and that’s what’s needed in Brazil, where our protests are about their corruption,” Ms. Morais said.
    Reaching beyond Brazil, Francis told Argentines who came here for the conference that “the church must be taken into the streets” in a struggle against complacency. “Stir things up, cause confounding, but do not diminish faith in Jesus Christ,” he said in Spanish.
    In each of Francis’ public appearances, he has been accorded a rock-star reception. On an uncommonly cold and rainy morning, hundreds of residents lined the narrow, muddy sidewalks of the Varginha favela to glimpse the first pope from the Americas, who obliged by stopping often to touch and bless people.
    Many onlookers had made their own shirts to commemorate the event, with a photo of Francis. Others draped themselves in Brazilian flags and waved banners bearing his image. Residents darted in and out of their homes, checking their televisions and radios to learn the pope’s whereabouts and calling the information out to their neighbors standing on wet rooftops to get a better view.
    Sônia Curato, 48, a manicurist, said the pope’s visit was different from that of other leaders. “Politicians come all the time. They make promises and leave,” she said. “He is a very simple person. You can tell that. He has charisma. He speaks to the people, doesn’t like going around in an armored car.”


By Simon Romero and Taylor Barnes
Published: July 25, 2013
www.nytimes.com

A
the teaching of the Catholic Church should be included in the slums’ schools.
B
social inequality should be abolished first.
C
corrupt politicians are involved in the project.
D
 violence cannot be defeated in such manner. 
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UECE 2013 - Biologia - Biomas brasileiros, Ecologia e ciências ambientais

As plantas da caatinga possuem algumas características particulares, como folhas transformadas em espinhos, cutículas altamente impermeáveis, caules suculentos, raízes profundas etc. Essa descrição se refere ao que definimos como

A
xeromorfismo.
B
caducifolia.
C
convergência adaptativa.
D
mimetismo.
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UECE 2013 - Biologia - Mitose, Meiose, Moléculas, células e tecidos

Considere os eventos abaixo, que podem ocorrer na mitose ou na meiose.


I. Emparelhamento dos cromossomos homólogos duplicados.

II. Alinhamento dos cromossomos no plano equatorial da célula.

III. Permutação de segmentos entre cromossomos homólogos.

IV. Divisão dos centrômeros, resultando na separação das cromátides irmãs.


No processo de multiplicação celular para reparação de tecidos, os eventos relacionados à distribuição equitativa do material genético entre as células resultantes estão contidos somente em

A
I e III.
B
II e IV.
C
II e III.
D
I e IV.