Questões de Inglês - Plural dos substantivos | Plural of nouns para Concurso

Foram encontradas 23 questões

Q2163865 Inglês

Julgue o item subsequente. 

The plural form of “That kid is a good student” is “Those kids are goods students”. 
Alternativas
Q2163852 Inglês

Julgue o item subsequente. 

The plural form of “mouse” is “mice”. 
Alternativas
Q2124646 Inglês
       Language teachers, like other teachers, had to quickly rethink priorities and means of delivery in response to the Covid-19 pandemic as well as measures to manage the pandemic. It isn’t surprising then that some of the findings in our 2021 survey relate to the pandemic.
       Language teaching was suspended by local education boards at one in five primary schools in January 2021 due to Covid-19, and the impact has been felt more acutely in deprived areas. Teachers in state secondary schools report that two in five pupils in Key Stage 3 (lower secondary) did not engage with language learning during the first national lockdown, leading to time lost to language learning for a lot of pupils.
         Dr Ian Collen said that “the most disadvantaged pupils are most likely to have been negatively affected by the impact of Covid-19, experiencing greater disruption to their language learning and fewer international opportunities. Looking to the future, schools should consider giving more curriculum time to languages, as well as more opportunities to use languages in real life, such as visits abroad.”
       Many teachers reported that they cannot wait to get back to face-to-face teaching in the classroom. Despite the barriers they have faced over the past year, it is encouraging to see how they pivoted to remote learning during the national lockdowns.


Internet: <www.britishcouncil.org> (adapted).

Based on the previous text, judge the following item.


The noun “curriculum”, in the third paragraph, comes from Latin and its plural form is curricula.


Alternativas
Q2121436 Inglês

Leia o texto para responder a questão.


English as a Lingua Franca


        A number of researchers have studied conversations in English as a Lingua Franca and have noted a number of somewhat surprising characteristics, including:

•  Non-use of third person present simple tense -s (She look very sad).

•  Interchangeable use of the relative pronouns who and which (a book who, a boy which).

•  Omission of articles where they are mandatory in native-speaker English.

•  Increasing of redundancy by adding “inexistent” prepositions (We have to study about…, The article treats of…).

•  Pluralisation of nouns which are considered uncountable in native-speaker English (informations, staffs).

        The evidence suggests that non-native speakers are not conforming to a native English standard. Indeed they seem to get along perfectly well despite the fact that they miss things out and put things in which they ‘should not do’. Not only this, but they are actually better at ‘accommodating’ - that is, negotiating shared meaning through helping each other in a more cooperative way - than, it is suggested, native speakers are when talking to second language speakers (Jenkins 2004). In other words, non-native speakers seem to be better at ELF communication than native speakers are.


(Jeremy Harmer, The practice of English language teaching. Adaptado) 

A wrongly pluralised English uncountable noun can be found in alternative:
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Q1851404 Inglês

Concerning the text above and previous knowledge, judge the item from

The plural form of the word “business” is businesses.
Alternativas
Respostas
6: E
7: C
8: C
9: A
10: C