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Q813403 Segurança e Saúde no Trabalho
Analisando uma situação existente de desconforto ambiental: Em qual alternativa (grau de importância), de “a” a “b”, você aplicaria seus conhecimentos?
Alternativas
Q813402 Inglês

The Great Wall of China

Walls and wall building have played a very important role in Chinese culture. These people, from the dim mists of prehistory have been wallconscious; from the Neolithic period – when barriers were used - to the Communist Revolution, walls were an essential part of any village. Not only towns and villages; the houses and the temples within them were somehow walled, and the houses also had no windows overlooking the street, thus giving the feeling of wandering around a huge maze. The name for “city” in Chinese (ch’eng) means wall, and over these walled cities, villages, houses and temples presides the god of walls and mounts, whose duties were, and still are, to protect and be responsible for the welfare of the inhabitants. Thus a great and extremely laborious task such as constructing a wall, which was supposed to run throughout the country, must not have seemed such an absurdity. 

However, it is indeed a common mistake to perceive the Great Wall as a single architectural structure, and it would also be erroneous to assume that it was built during a single dynasty. For the building of the wall connected the various dynasties, and each of these dynasties somehow contributed to the refurbishing and the construction of a wall, whose foundations had been laid many centuries ago. It was during the fourth and third century B.C. that each warring state started building walls to protect their kingdoms, both against one another and against the northern nomads. Especially three of these states: the Ch’in, the Chao and the Yen, corresponding respectively to the modern provinces of Shensi, Shanzi and Hopei, over and above building walls that surrounded their kingdoms, also laid the foundations on which Ch’in Shih Huang Di would build his first continuous Great Wall. 

The role that the Great Wall played in the growth of Chinese economy was an important one. Throughout the centuries many settlements were established along the new border. The garrison troops were instructed to reclaim wasteland and to plant crops on it, roads and canals were built, to mention just a few of the works carried out. All these undertakings greatly helped to increase the country’s trade and cultural exchanges with many remote areas and also with the southern, central and western parts of Asia – the formation of the Silk Route. Builders, garrisons, artisans, farmers and peasants left behind a trail of objects, including inscribed tablets, household articles, and written work, which have become extremely valuable archaeological evidence to the study of defence institutions of the Great Wall and the everyday life of these people who lived and died along the wall


Crops were planted
Alternativas
Q813401 Inglês

The Great Wall of China

Walls and wall building have played a very important role in Chinese culture. These people, from the dim mists of prehistory have been wallconscious; from the Neolithic period – when barriers were used - to the Communist Revolution, walls were an essential part of any village. Not only towns and villages; the houses and the temples within them were somehow walled, and the houses also had no windows overlooking the street, thus giving the feeling of wandering around a huge maze. The name for “city” in Chinese (ch’eng) means wall, and over these walled cities, villages, houses and temples presides the god of walls and mounts, whose duties were, and still are, to protect and be responsible for the welfare of the inhabitants. Thus a great and extremely laborious task such as constructing a wall, which was supposed to run throughout the country, must not have seemed such an absurdity. 

However, it is indeed a common mistake to perceive the Great Wall as a single architectural structure, and it would also be erroneous to assume that it was built during a single dynasty. For the building of the wall connected the various dynasties, and each of these dynasties somehow contributed to the refurbishing and the construction of a wall, whose foundations had been laid many centuries ago. It was during the fourth and third century B.C. that each warring state started building walls to protect their kingdoms, both against one another and against the northern nomads. Especially three of these states: the Ch’in, the Chao and the Yen, corresponding respectively to the modern provinces of Shensi, Shanzi and Hopei, over and above building walls that surrounded their kingdoms, also laid the foundations on which Ch’in Shih Huang Di would build his first continuous Great Wall. 

The role that the Great Wall played in the growth of Chinese economy was an important one. Throughout the centuries many settlements were established along the new border. The garrison troops were instructed to reclaim wasteland and to plant crops on it, roads and canals were built, to mention just a few of the works carried out. All these undertakings greatly helped to increase the country’s trade and cultural exchanges with many remote areas and also with the southern, central and western parts of Asia – the formation of the Silk Route. Builders, garrisons, artisans, farmers and peasants left behind a trail of objects, including inscribed tablets, household articles, and written work, which have become extremely valuable archaeological evidence to the study of defence institutions of the Great Wall and the everyday life of these people who lived and died along the wall


‘Thus’ on line 7 can be replaced by____________ without changing the idea.
Alternativas
Q813400 Inglês

The Great Wall of China

Walls and wall building have played a very important role in Chinese culture. These people, from the dim mists of prehistory have been wallconscious; from the Neolithic period – when barriers were used - to the Communist Revolution, walls were an essential part of any village. Not only towns and villages; the houses and the temples within them were somehow walled, and the houses also had no windows overlooking the street, thus giving the feeling of wandering around a huge maze. The name for “city” in Chinese (ch’eng) means wall, and over these walled cities, villages, houses and temples presides the god of walls and mounts, whose duties were, and still are, to protect and be responsible for the welfare of the inhabitants. Thus a great and extremely laborious task such as constructing a wall, which was supposed to run throughout the country, must not have seemed such an absurdity. 

However, it is indeed a common mistake to perceive the Great Wall as a single architectural structure, and it would also be erroneous to assume that it was built during a single dynasty. For the building of the wall connected the various dynasties, and each of these dynasties somehow contributed to the refurbishing and the construction of a wall, whose foundations had been laid many centuries ago. It was during the fourth and third century B.C. that each warring state started building walls to protect their kingdoms, both against one another and against the northern nomads. Especially three of these states: the Ch’in, the Chao and the Yen, corresponding respectively to the modern provinces of Shensi, Shanzi and Hopei, over and above building walls that surrounded their kingdoms, also laid the foundations on which Ch’in Shih Huang Di would build his first continuous Great Wall. 

The role that the Great Wall played in the growth of Chinese economy was an important one. Throughout the centuries many settlements were established along the new border. The garrison troops were instructed to reclaim wasteland and to plant crops on it, roads and canals were built, to mention just a few of the works carried out. All these undertakings greatly helped to increase the country’s trade and cultural exchanges with many remote areas and also with the southern, central and western parts of Asia – the formation of the Silk Route. Builders, garrisons, artisans, farmers and peasants left behind a trail of objects, including inscribed tablets, household articles, and written work, which have become extremely valuable archaeological evidence to the study of defence institutions of the Great Wall and the everyday life of these people who lived and died along the wall


Constructing a wall that ran the length of the country
Alternativas
Q813399 Inglês

The Great Wall of China

Walls and wall building have played a very important role in Chinese culture. These people, from the dim mists of prehistory have been wallconscious; from the Neolithic period – when barriers were used - to the Communist Revolution, walls were an essential part of any village. Not only towns and villages; the houses and the temples within them were somehow walled, and the houses also had no windows overlooking the street, thus giving the feeling of wandering around a huge maze. The name for “city” in Chinese (ch’eng) means wall, and over these walled cities, villages, houses and temples presides the god of walls and mounts, whose duties were, and still are, to protect and be responsible for the welfare of the inhabitants. Thus a great and extremely laborious task such as constructing a wall, which was supposed to run throughout the country, must not have seemed such an absurdity. 

However, it is indeed a common mistake to perceive the Great Wall as a single architectural structure, and it would also be erroneous to assume that it was built during a single dynasty. For the building of the wall connected the various dynasties, and each of these dynasties somehow contributed to the refurbishing and the construction of a wall, whose foundations had been laid many centuries ago. It was during the fourth and third century B.C. that each warring state started building walls to protect their kingdoms, both against one another and against the northern nomads. Especially three of these states: the Ch’in, the Chao and the Yen, corresponding respectively to the modern provinces of Shensi, Shanzi and Hopei, over and above building walls that surrounded their kingdoms, also laid the foundations on which Ch’in Shih Huang Di would build his first continuous Great Wall. 

The role that the Great Wall played in the growth of Chinese economy was an important one. Throughout the centuries many settlements were established along the new border. The garrison troops were instructed to reclaim wasteland and to plant crops on it, roads and canals were built, to mention just a few of the works carried out. All these undertakings greatly helped to increase the country’s trade and cultural exchanges with many remote areas and also with the southern, central and western parts of Asia – the formation of the Silk Route. Builders, garrisons, artisans, farmers and peasants left behind a trail of objects, including inscribed tablets, household articles, and written work, which have become extremely valuable archaeological evidence to the study of defence institutions of the Great Wall and the everyday life of these people who lived and died along the wall


Chinese cities resembled a maze
Alternativas
Q813398 Geologia
Os reservatórios de gás natural são constituídos de rochas porosas capazes de reter petróleo e gás. Em função do teor de petróleo bruto e de gás livre, classifica-se o gás, quanto ao seu estado de origem, sendo: 
I. Em gás associado e gás não-associado. II. Em gás liquefeito e gás natural III. Em gás puro e gás composto IV. Em gás complexo e gás não-associado
Está correto afirmar que: 
Alternativas
Q813397 Geologia
Na aplicação de métodos geofísicos usam-se medidas das propriedades físicas da Terra para estudá-la. Os mais utilizados na indústria do petróleo são:
I. Gravimetria e Magnetometria II. Altimetria e Resonância III. Composições das rochas IV. Estratigráficos  
Está correto afirmar que: 
Alternativas
Q813395 Química
O gás natural é o mais limpo de todos os combustíveis fósseis, porém, na sua combustão libera alguns gases. Dos gases abaixo, na combustão do gás natural, é liberado em maior quantidade o: 
I. Monóxido de carbono. II. Dióxido de carbono. III. Oxido de nitrogênio. IV. Dióxido de enxofre. V. Monóxido de nitrogênio.
Está correto afirmar que: 
Alternativas
Q813394 Segurança e Saúde no Trabalho
Para a chegada do gás natural ao consumidor final são utilizadas redes de distribuição constituídas por malhas de tubulações. Com a modernização do mercado estão sendo empregados na fabricação dessas tubulações, novos materiais, como por exemplo o: 
I. Aço. II. Cobre. III. Policloreto de vinila (PVC). IV. Ferro fundido. V. Polietileno
Está correto afirmar que:
Alternativas
Q813393 Direito Administrativo
Assinale a alternava correta. Segundo a Lei 8.666/93, o órgão ou entidade signatária do instrumento contratual é chamado de:
Alternativas
Q813392 Direito Administrativo
Assinale a alternativa correta. Subordinam-se ao regime da Lei 8.666/93:
I. Os órgãos da administração direta. II. As autarquias. III. As empresas públicas. IV. As sociedades de economia mista. 
Indique a alternativa correta:  
Alternativas
Q813391 Direito Administrativo
Assinale a alternativa INCORRETA, com relação ao impedimento ou não de atuar em processo administrativo: 
Alternativas
Q813390 Direito Administrativo
Assinale a alternativa INCORRETA. Nos processos administrativos serão observados, entre outros, os critérios de:
Alternativas
Q813389 Direito Administrativo
Assinale a alternava correta. Segundo a Lei 9.784/99, a unidade de atuação integrante da estrutura da Administração direta e da estrutura da Administração indireta é considerada:
Alternativas
Q813388 Matemática
A taxa de juros de 24% ao ano capitalizada mensalmente é na verdade uma taxa nominal que pode ser convertida na taxa efetiva de:
Alternativas
Q813387 Matemática
Sabe-se que um filho tem a terça parte da idade de seu pai, considerando que o somatório de suas idades é de 52 anos, qual é a idade do Pai?
Alternativas
Q813386 Matemática
Leia as frases abaixo sobre matemática financeira: 
I. No regime de juros compostos 10% ao mês resultam na taxa equivalente de 120% ao ano. II. No regime de juros simples as taxas proporcionais sempre serão iguais as taxas equivalentes. III. A correção monetária é empregada para atualizar um valor financeiro no tempo em virtude da desvalorização da moeda decorrente do processo de inflação. IV. No sistema Price de amortização todas as parcelas das prestações são fixas (uniformes). 
A sequência correta é: 
Alternativas
Q813385 Matemática
Uma determinada mercadoria está sendo vendida com preço à vista de R$ 2.000,00 acima do seu preço de custo. Sabe-se que o vendedor adota uma margem de lucro de 8%. Qual foi o preço de custo do produto a ser vendido?
Alternativas
Q813384 Noções de Informática
Com relação aos principais componentes de um computador (hardware e software) assinale a única alternativa CORRETA:
Alternativas
Q813383 Noções de Informática
Na planilha eletrônica MS Excel, versão 2007, dadas as células A1=1, A2=2, A3=3, B1=4, B2=5, B3=6, C1=7, C2=8, e C3=9 e digita-se em C4, a seguinte fórmula =MED(SOMA(A1:C2);C3) e logo em seguida tecla-se ENTER, o resultado apresentado será o número:
Alternativas
Respostas
16861: A
16862: C
16863: A
16864: B
16865: B
16866: C
16867: B
16868: C
16869: A
16870: A
16871: C
16872: D
16873: B
16874: C
16875: A
16876: B
16877: A
16878: A
16879: C
16880: D