Questões de Concurso Público SEE-AC 2020 para Professor PNS P2 - Língua Inglesa

Foram encontradas 4 questões

Q1705152 Inglês

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Available in: https://www.gocomics.com, accessed on February 18th, 2020. Garfield by Jim Davis

Read the sentences below and choose the one that has a verb which could replace ALLOW and keep the same meaning as in “Visits to Chinese educational institutions allow the college students in my course to get a look at real children”.
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Q1705153 Inglês

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REFERS TO QUESTION



Available in: https://www.gocomics.com, accessed on February 18th, 2020. Garfield by Jim Davis

Choose correct meaning for MISSUS as in: “So what did you get the missus this year?”
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Q1705154 Inglês

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REFERS TO QUESTION



Available in: https://www.gocomics.com, accessed on February 18th, 2020. Garfield by Jim Davis

Choose the correct answer for the following question: “So what did you get the missus this year?”
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Q1705163 Inglês

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The Literary Influences of Superstar Musician David Bowie

BY JOHN O'CONNELL ON 10/31/19 AT 5:00 AM EDT


David Bowie was a pop star for most of his career from the 1960s until his death in 2016. He was known for his flamboyant style, songwriting and the ability to artistically turn on a dime. But Bowie, who died of cancer at 69, was more than a multi-platinum rock and roller. He was also one of the more literate composers in the business.

So much so, in fact, that in conjunction with a career retrospective in 2013 at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, Bowie issued a list of the one hundred books he considered the most important and influential. British music columnist John O'Connell linked this list to Bowie's prolific music. The result? A book called Bowie's Bookshelf out this month from Gallery Books.

William S. Burroughs first made the link between Bowie's lyrics and T. S. Eliot's poetry. In a Rolling Stone interview, Burroughs asked if Hunky Dory's "Eight Line Poem" had been influenced by Eliot's "The Hollow Men." Bowie's reply: "Never read him." But Bowie was definitely exposed to Eliot's influence. "Goodnight Ladies" on Transformer, the album Bowie produced for Lou Reed in 1972, is a riff on the end of the second section, "A Game of Chess," from Eliot's poem "The Waste Land." Eliot, for his part, is deliberately quoting Ophelia's "Good night, sweet ladies" speech from Hamlet. Eliot's method established a new protocol for artistic theft—the modern poet in dialogue with his or her predecessors. Bowie, too, was candid about how much he took from other artists. "You can't steal from a thief," he said when LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy admitted to stealing from Bowie's songs.


Avaiable in : https://www.newsweek.com/2019/11/15, accessed on February 20th, 2020. Adapted.
According to text , it is accurate to state that:
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1: E
2: A
3: D
4: E