Questões de Concurso Público SEDF 2022 para Professor de Educação Básica - Inglês, Edital nº 31
Foram encontradas 50 questões

The word “branch” (line 1) is synonymous with ramification.

The text talks about the importance of unwinding the busy modern life which is spiritually destructive to people.

In the first paragraph, “exacerbated” and “overwhelmed” are both adjectives and refer to how the author feels about people being so busy.

In the second paragraph, the words “How”, “Why” and “When” function as question words and that is their main and only use in the English language.

The word “did”, as used in line 8, is an auxiliary verb.

The word “crave” (line 24) could be correctly replaced with dream, without changing the meaning of the text.

The final –ed in the verb “stopped” (line 1) and the final –ed in the adjective “stressed” (line 12) are both pronounced the same way.

The term “stressed” (line 12) is a verb in the Past Participle form.

The term “unfold”, as used in line 17, is an intransitive verb.

The sentence “It saps our ability to be fully present” (lines 21 and 22) could be correctly rewritten as It reduces our ability to be fully present, without changing the meaning of the text.

The term “Whatever” (line 9) functions as a pronoun.

The expression “pregnant pauses” (line 17) refers to the behaviour of women during pregnancy.

The text focus on narcissism as being an uncontrolled act of over-confidence, lack of empathy and a harmful psychological condition for society as a whole only.

According to the text, researchers have been trying to understand why narcissists have been so toxic to modern society.

The beginning of the word “psychologists” (line 3) is pronounced with the /p/ sound (voiceless bilabial plosive).

In “negative responses to narcissism can overlook the positive benefits to the narcissists themselves” (lines 5 and 6), the verb “overlook” could be correctly replaced by the verb omit, without a change in meaning.

In “rise” (line 11), the letter “s” is pronounced like a /z/.

In “people might infuriate others but are less likely to be stressed or depressed” (lines 8 and 9), the verbs “stressed” and “depressed” are both in the Simple Past tense and refer to “people”.

A reflexive pronoun refers back to the subject of a sentence or clause; there is an example of a reflexive pronoun in the third paragraph.

The word “little” (line 16) is a quantifier and is used with both countable and uncountable nouns.