Questões de Concurso Sobre interpretação de texto | reading comprehension em inglês

Foram encontradas 13.083 questões

Q2081031 Inglês
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Internet: <www.usatoday.com> (adapted).

According to the text, the history of the ethanol program in Brazil shows that


this program was a reaction to the oil shortage of 1975.

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Ano: 2007 Banca: FEC Órgão: Prefeitura de Vassouras - RJ
Q1201400 Inglês
The man........seeing the objects before and....... us a weird story about the way he'd seen them.
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Ano: 2007 Banca: FEC Órgão: EMGEPRON
Q1198363 Inglês
WTO Complaint Against U.S. Corn Grows
DAVOS, Switzerland -- The European Union, Australia, Argentina and Brazil have joined Canada in a complaint against the United States over what they claim are illegal government handouts to American corn growers, trade officials said Monday. The request for consultations, filed by the four trading powers and others at the Geneva-based World Trade Organization, threatens a major commercial dispute at a time when global free trade talks remain stalled over agricultural tariffs and subsidies and the U.S. begins debating a new multibillion-dollar farm bill. Under WTO rules, a three-month consultation period is required before a country can ask the trade body to launch a formal investigation. AWTO case can result in punitive sanctions being authorized, but panels take many months, and sometimes years, to reach a decision.
Canada lodged its complaint on Jan. 8, claiming that some $9 billion paid out by the U.S. annually in export credit guarantees and other subsidies unfairly and illegally deflated international corn prices.
"This is not just about corn," said Clodoaldo Hugueney, Brazilian ambassador to the WTO. "Brazil is the world's largest ethanol exporter, so this is an important issue for us."
Hugueney said any country's large subsidy program concerns Brazil as a major agriculture exporter. (…)
The WTO, in a case brought by Brazil, already has ruled that some cotton subsidies are illegal and the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush has been coming under pressure to reform a number of its farm support programs.
"Many of the issues in Canada's complaint we have also complained about concerning U.S. cotton programs," said Hugueney in a telephone interview from Geneva.
Canada's complaint over U.S. corn support also challenged whether the billions of dollars in overall farm subsidies paid out by the U.S. government comply with international commerce rules.
It argued that U.S. subsidy levels for a number of years on farm products including wheat, sugar and soybeans were illegal and urged Washington to address its concerns when drafting the farm bill that will set out American agricultural support programs for the next five years.
The U.S. says it has offered cuts as part of the WTO's global free trade talks, but others have called the pledges largely artificial, addressing only permitted levels of government subsidies and failing to cut what Washington actually gives to its farmers.
(By Bradley S. Klapper, The Associated Press, Monday, January 22, 2007, The Washington Post)
The expression “set out” (10 §) means:
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Q358301 Inglês
Based on the text above, judge the following items.

Besides PETROBRAS, three other Brazilian companies also made significant progress in relation to the 2006 survey.
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Q358290 Inglês
According to the text,

for customer contact positions, the candidate’s educational background is the decisive factor.
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Q358288 Inglês
According to the text,

customer service and the image presented by the business is a concern solely of the business owner.
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Q358286 Inglês
It can be inferred from the text that

an obvious lack of a dressing code can turn customers away from a business.
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Q358285 Inglês
It can be inferred from the text that

very expensive, fashionable stores do not face problems with customer service.
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Q354324 Inglês
In the United States, biosecurity measures are to be taken by:
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Q354120 Inglês
The outwear worn to tend quarantined animals:
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Q354119 Inglês
The word PEN (5º §) means “an enclosure where we keep…”:
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Q354118 Inglês
The greatest risk of contamination comes from:
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Q354116 Inglês
THEY (2º §) refers to:
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Q354114 Inglês
The word LIVESTOCK (1º §) is used to refer to specific kinds of animals. Which of the following could NOT be referred to as livestock?
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Q354113 Inglês
Tick the measure that MUST be present in successful biosecurity planning:
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Q354111 Inglês
Biosecurity is defined in the text as a set of measures aiming at:
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Q246006 Inglês
It can be inferred from the text that

time and money spent training employees on how to deal with people really pays off.
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Q239758 Inglês
Imagem 005.jpg
Imagem 006.jpg

It can be inferred from the text that

According to the text,

customers who have complained about a certain company make good candidates for mystery shoppers.
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Q203358 Inglês
            Paulo César Nóbrega is one of 40 milion people living with HIV/AIDS. This is story:
       Like most young people of my generation, I started using drugs as an adolescent. By the time I was 16, I was taking cannabis, hallucinogens and injecting drugs. Soon, my addiction led me to drug trafficking. Between 1985 and 1993, I was imprisoned in the city of São Paulo, Brazil, where I was diagnosed HIV-positive.
       Initially, I was shocked. But I didn't really know what HIV or AIDS were, which is why I continued using drugs and sharing needles with other inmates. We received no guidance or preventive care.
In prison, AIDS first manifested itself through tuberculosis, an illness I suffered from three times. Although I was eventually given anti-retroviral medicines, I continued taking drugs and only restarted the treatment in earnest after abandoning drugs for good in 1999.
       At that time, I was a member of a support group in my hometown, the coastal city of São Vicente, and was close to other HIV-positive people. We soon decided to establish the Hipupiara NGO to promote a sense of unity among people living with HIV and to improve their quality of life.
       Unfortunately, I suffered a lot of prejudice for being HIV-positive, including from members of my family. I was also denied jobs. Then, in 2001, I started working as a fisherman, a job I retired from in 2005, at 50, due to poor health.
       Today, I am free of drugs and am sticking to the treatment. I work as a volunteer for Hipupiara, contacting drug users in the city and referring them to treatment and assistance services.
       Thanks to all the information I have accumulated about HIV/AIDS, I can now face and beat prejudice. People infected with HIV and drug users should not close up or avoid talking about their problems; we should help each other so that we can all lead a better life.

(Available in: < http://www.unodc.org/newsletter/200601/page005.htm...>; Acess in: Mar. 6, 2006.)

Mr. Nóbrega “was denied jobs” because:
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Q203357 Inglês
            Paulo César Nóbrega is one of 40 milion people living with HIV/AIDS. This is story:
       Like most young people of my generation, I started using drugs as an adolescent. By the time I was 16, I was taking cannabis, hallucinogens and injecting drugs. Soon, my addiction led me to drug trafficking. Between 1985 and 1993, I was imprisoned in the city of São Paulo, Brazil, where I was diagnosed HIV-positive.
       Initially, I was shocked. But I didn't really know what HIV or AIDS were, which is why I continued using drugs and sharing needles with other inmates. We received no guidance or preventive care.
In prison, AIDS first manifested itself through tuberculosis, an illness I suffered from three times. Although I was eventually given anti-retroviral medicines, I continued taking drugs and only restarted the treatment in earnest after abandoning drugs for good in 1999.
       At that time, I was a member of a support group in my hometown, the coastal city of São Vicente, and was close to other HIV-positive people. We soon decided to establish the Hipupiara NGO to promote a sense of unity among people living with HIV and to improve their quality of life.
       Unfortunately, I suffered a lot of prejudice for being HIV-positive, including from members of my family. I was also denied jobs. Then, in 2001, I started working as a fisherman, a job I retired from in 2005, at 50, due to poor health.
       Today, I am free of drugs and am sticking to the treatment. I work as a volunteer for Hipupiara, contacting drug users in the city and referring them to treatment and assistance services.
       Thanks to all the information I have accumulated about HIV/AIDS, I can now face and beat prejudice. People infected with HIV and drug users should not close up or avoid talking about their problems; we should help each other so that we can all lead a better life.

(Available in: < http://www.unodc.org/newsletter/200601/page005.htm...>; Acess in: Mar. 6, 2006.)

During the time Mr. Nóbrega spent in prison he:
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Respostas
12641: E
12642: E
12643: C
12644: C
12645: E
12646: E
12647: C
12648: E
12649: D
12650: E
12651: B
12652: D
12653: B
12654: C
12655: E
12656: B
12657: C
12658: C
12659: D
12660: A