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Em relação a Arte Neoclássica, analise:
I - Tendência artística e literária que surgiu em contraposição as ideias do Barroco e do Rococó;
II - Este estilo representa a restauração ou reconstrução das formas artísticas da Antiguidade Clássica e Greco – Romana.
Sobre os itens acima:
Analyze the context below.
“He offered to help her publishing, and in the process of _____________________ really shook her up when he __________________ to move the mentorship into a relationship.”
Choose the best option that completes the context.
Analyze the sentence below.
“Italian authorities gave eleven women and five men permission to get off on Saturday.”
As the sentence should be rewritten in a passive voice, identify the correct verb tense.
Observe the paragraph below.
“While the news was much easier to take this time, she says carrying the baby girls ____________________ much harder.”
Identify the best option that completes the context.
Read the fragment below.
“The fourteen men who came down the river from Flowers Bank _______________ been local neighbors.”
Choose the best option that completes the context.
Read the fragment below.
“The president made an announcement that 200 additional front-line officers will be _____ the nighttime and early-morning hours this summer.”
Choose the best option that completes the context above.
Read the text below and answer the following question.
Heard the one about the cop who infiltrated the KKK? Read the true story behind the latest film from director Spike Lee.
In October 1978 Ron Stallworth saw a classified advert in one of the city's daily newspapers. The ad invited readers interested in receiving information from the Ku Klux Klan to write to a PO box located in a nearby town.
Stallworth, curiosity piqued, wrote a note to the PO box under his own name. In it he claimed to be a white man who was interested in learning more about the KKK's activities.
Two weeks later he received a phone call from the local organizer of the Klan's Colorado Springs chapter, asking him why he wished to join.
From these speculative beginnings sprang an audacious undercover investigation, conducted first over the phone but eventually involving face-to-face contact.
It led to one of Stallworth's white colleagues impersonating him with such success he was invited to become leader of the Klan's local chapter.
It also led to the exposure of white supremacists in the military, the thwarting of numerous planned cross burnings and Stallworth becoming a card-carrying member of one of America's most detested organizations.
Most detested, yes. Brightest, no. At no point during Stallworth's investigation did his fellow Knights of the Ku Klux Klan suspect the man they were talking to over the phone and the man who was attending their meetings were not the same person.
Stallworth eventually left Colorado to become an investigator in Utah, where he became a
recognized expert in the correlation between gangster rap music and street gang culture. He retired in
2005, after which he wrote the memoir that saw him receive death threats from outraged white
supremacists.
(https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-44457873)
Read the text below and answer the following question.
Heard the one about the cop who infiltrated the KKK? Read the true story behind the latest film from director Spike Lee.
In October 1978 Ron Stallworth saw a classified advert in one of the city's daily newspapers. The ad invited readers interested in receiving information from the Ku Klux Klan to write to a PO box located in a nearby town.
Stallworth, curiosity piqued, wrote a note to the PO box under his own name. In it he claimed to be a white man who was interested in learning more about the KKK's activities.
Two weeks later he received a phone call from the local organizer of the Klan's Colorado Springs chapter, asking him why he wished to join.
From these speculative beginnings sprang an audacious undercover investigation, conducted first over the phone but eventually involving face-to-face contact.
It led to one of Stallworth's white colleagues impersonating him with such success he was invited to become leader of the Klan's local chapter.
It also led to the exposure of white supremacists in the military, the thwarting of numerous planned cross burnings and Stallworth becoming a card-carrying member of one of America's most detested organizations.
Most detested, yes. Brightest, no. At no point during Stallworth's investigation did his fellow Knights of the Ku Klux Klan suspect the man they were talking to over the phone and the man who was attending their meetings were not the same person.
Stallworth eventually left Colorado to become an investigator in Utah, where he became a
recognized expert in the correlation between gangster rap music and street gang culture. He retired in
2005, after which he wrote the memoir that saw him receive death threats from outraged white
supremacists.
(https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-44457873)
Read the text below and answer the following question.
Heard the one about the cop who infiltrated the KKK? Read the true story behind the latest film from director Spike Lee.
In October 1978 Ron Stallworth saw a classified advert in one of the city's daily newspapers. The ad invited readers interested in receiving information from the Ku Klux Klan to write to a PO box located in a nearby town.
Stallworth, curiosity piqued, wrote a note to the PO box under his own name. In it he claimed to be a white man who was interested in learning more about the KKK's activities.
Two weeks later he received a phone call from the local organizer of the Klan's Colorado Springs chapter, asking him why he wished to join.
From these speculative beginnings sprang an audacious undercover investigation, conducted first over the phone but eventually involving face-to-face contact.
It led to one of Stallworth's white colleagues impersonating him with such success he was invited to become leader of the Klan's local chapter.
It also led to the exposure of white supremacists in the military, the thwarting of numerous planned cross burnings and Stallworth becoming a card-carrying member of one of America's most detested organizations.
Most detested, yes. Brightest, no. At no point during Stallworth's investigation did his fellow Knights of the Ku Klux Klan suspect the man they were talking to over the phone and the man who was attending their meetings were not the same person.
Stallworth eventually left Colorado to become an investigator in Utah, where he became a
recognized expert in the correlation between gangster rap music and street gang culture. He retired in
2005, after which he wrote the memoir that saw him receive death threats from outraged white
supremacists.
(https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-44457873)
Read the text below and answer the following question.
Heard the one about the cop who infiltrated the KKK? Read the true story behind the latest film from director Spike Lee.
In October 1978 Ron Stallworth saw a classified advert in one of the city's daily newspapers. The ad invited readers interested in receiving information from the Ku Klux Klan to write to a PO box located in a nearby town.
Stallworth, curiosity piqued, wrote a note to the PO box under his own name. In it he claimed to be a white man who was interested in learning more about the KKK's activities.
Two weeks later he received a phone call from the local organizer of the Klan's Colorado Springs chapter, asking him why he wished to join.
From these speculative beginnings sprang an audacious undercover investigation, conducted first over the phone but eventually involving face-to-face contact.
It led to one of Stallworth's white colleagues impersonating him with such success he was invited to become leader of the Klan's local chapter.
It also led to the exposure of white supremacists in the military, the thwarting of numerous planned cross burnings and Stallworth becoming a card-carrying member of one of America's most detested organizations.
Most detested, yes. Brightest, no. At no point during Stallworth's investigation did his fellow Knights of the Ku Klux Klan suspect the man they were talking to over the phone and the man who was attending their meetings were not the same person.
Stallworth eventually left Colorado to become an investigator in Utah, where he became a
recognized expert in the correlation between gangster rap music and street gang culture. He retired in
2005, after which he wrote the memoir that saw him receive death threats from outraged white
supremacists.
(https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-44457873)