Questões de Concurso
Comentadas sobre vocabulário | vocabulary em inglês
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Internet: <https://www.nytimes.com/>

From Isaiah Berlin, The Roots of Romanticism. Princeton University Press:
Princeton, New Jersey, 1999, pps. 2-3.
In lines 29 and 30, the words “doubt” and “folly” have the same meaning.

Gombrich, E. H. The Story of Art. Phaidon, 16th.
Ed. 1995. pp.65-6, with adaptations.
As far as vocabulary is concerned, mark the following item as right (C) or wrong (E).
The word “novel”, in “novel character” (line 37),
means “fictional, not based on real life”.

Gombrich, E. H. The Story of Art. Phaidon, 16th.
Ed. 1995. pp.65-6, with adaptations.
As far as vocabulary is concerned, mark the following item as right (C) or wrong (E).
The fragment “after his god” (line 34) means
“prostrated himself in front of the deity”.

Gombrich, E. H. The Story of Art. Phaidon, 16th.
Ed. 1995. pp.65-6, with adaptations.
As far as vocabulary is concerned, mark the following item as right (C) or wrong (E).
The expression “fall into place” (lines 2 and 3) means
“to begin to make sense or to fit together”.

Gombrich, E. H. The Story of Art. Phaidon, 16th.
Ed. 1995. pp.65-6, with adaptations.
Based on the text, mark the following item as right (C) or wrong (E).
The fragment “shook the iron bars of the Egyptian
style” (lines 26 and 27) means “to raise the required
artistic standards further”.

Stanzel, V. New Realities in Foreign Affairs: Diplomacy in the 21st Century.
SWP Research Paper 2018, RP 11, November 2018,with adaptations.
Considering the vocabulary of the text, mark the following item as right (C) or wrong (E).
In line 5, the expression “by and large” could be
replaced with partially without changing the meaning
of the sentence.

Munoz, Maricela. “Diplomacy in times of COVID-19.” Diplo (blog). Jul.
16, 2020. Accessed Sep. 10, 2020. https://www.diplomacy.edu/blog, with
adaptations.
In line 19, the word “hindered” could be replaced with the expression set back without changing the meaning of the sentence.
Text I
While viruses do not respect borders, their spread and their chances of survival have long depended greatly on the laws, policies and acts of states. However, not all states are up to the job, writes Adam Roberts.
A.J.P. Taylor often observed that great events can have very small causes. The 2020 COVID-19 pandemic is fresh evidence for this proposition. The cause is in all likelihood tiny and accidental: a genetic mutation in a virus, which then spreads into the human population. Like earlier epidemics throughout history, it could have happened with no human intentionality. Its consequences are already momentous and will be even more so before it is over.
The novel coronavirus can easily be seen as a profoundly anti-democratic force. In its first eight months, from early January to mid-August, it produced over 20 million cases of the COVID-19 disease. That disease has killed over 800,000 people and counting; put millions out of work; drastically curtailed travel; precipitated states of emergency; and caused citizens to be placed under detailed and intrusive administrative control, demonstrations to be banned, and elections to be rescheduled or postponed. Bitter disagreements have arisen about when and how to ease restrictions on movement. COVID-19 has generated a revival of conspiracy theories and unjustified recriminations, and prompted absurd denials of medical reality by certain political leaders. Among states, the pandemic has actually heightened some long-existing disputes, most notably those on trade and other matters between China and the United States. The capacity of the United Nations system to address epidemics has been called into question, not least in harsh American criticisms of the World Health Organization (WHO).
It is too simple to cast the pandemic crisis merely as a narrative of rampant authoritarianism versus embattled democracy. The long history of pandemics, earthquakes and other disasters reminds us of the enduring complexity of disaster management, and of the many controversies surrounding it, including the causes of and responses to plagues. States respond in different ways, raising questions regarding the relative effectiveness of democratic versus authoritarian states. International health organisations, especially the WHO, have important roles in dealing with epidemics, whether regional or global. Yet their formal powers are limited and their effectiveness depends on state cooperation. Epidemics, and action to control them, do sometimes play a part in increased authoritarianism, but they can also give rise to more positive initiatives of various kinds.
Adapted from: https://www.iiss.org/. Accessed on March 20, 2021.
About ideas stated in the text above and the words used in it, judge the following item.
In “Natural gas and coal-fired power plants need water to
stay online. Yet those water facilities froze in the cold
temperatures and others lost access to the electricity they
require to operate”, it is possible to substitute “Yet” for Even
so without changing the meaning of the sentence.