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Prova Analista de Pesquisa Energética - Petróleo - Exploração e Produção - EPE
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Questões extraídas da Prova :: clique na alternativa correta
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Questão 1 de 12 Q1430882 Q2 da prova

Assinale a opção que mostra um texto propagandístico apoiado na sedução.

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Questão 2 de 12 Q1430884 Q3 da prova

Assinale a frase que se enquadra entre os textos argumentativos, apresentando uma tese e argumentos.

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Questão 3 de 12 Q1430886 Q5 da prova

Assinale a frase em que a comparação realizada não é explicada.

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Questão 4 de 12 Q1430887 Q6 da prova

Um dos empregos mais frequentes dos pronomes possessivos é sua utilização para dar ideia de posse de algo. Assinale a frase que exemplifica esse uso.

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Questão 5 de 12 Q1430889 Q8 da prova

Assinale a frase que focaliza a política como algo positivo.

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Questão 6 de 12 Q1430890 Q9 da prova
Read Text I and answer the eight questions that follow it: Text I Shock of the old: Believe it or not, battery -powered vehicles have been around since Victorian times. The history of the electric car is surprisingly enraging. If you imagine early electric vehicles at all (full disclosure: I didn’t until recently), it will probably be as the quixotic and possibly dangerous dream of a few eccentrics, maybe in the 1920s or 1930s, when domestic electrification became widespread. It’s easy to imagine some stiff -collared proto -Musk getting bored of hunting and affairs, eyeing his newly installed electric lights speculatively, then wreaking untold havoc and mass electrocutions. The reality is entirely different. By 1900, a third of all cars on the road in the US were electric; we’re looking at the history of a cruelly missed opportunity, and it started astonishingly early. The Scottish engineer Robert Anderson had a go at an electric car of sorts way back in the 1830s, though his invention was somewhat stymied by the fact rechargeable batteries were not invented until 1859, making his crude carriage something of a one -trick pony (and far less useful than an actual pony). It’s debatable whether or not Scotland was ready for this brave new world anyway: in 1842, Robert Davidson (another Scot, who had, a few years earlier, also tried his hand at an electric vehicle) saw his electric locomotive Galvani “broken by some malicious hands almost beyond repair” in Perth. The contemporary consensus was that it was attacked by railway workers fearful for their jobs. Despite this unpromising start, electric vehicles had entered widespread commercial circulation by the start of the 20th century, particularly in the US. Electric cabs crisscrossed Manhattan, 1897’s bestselling US car was electric and, when he was shot in 1901, President McKinley was taken to hospital in an electric ambulance. London had Walter Bersey’s electric taxis, and Berlin’s fire engines went electric in 1908; the future looked bright, clean and silent. By the 1930s, however, the tide had definitively turned against electric, cursed by range limitations and impractical charging times while petrol gained the upper hand thanks partly – and ironically – to the electric starter motor. The Horseless Age magazine, which vehemently backed the petrol non -horse, would have been delighted. There was a brief resurgence of interest in the late 1960s, when the US Congress passed a bill promoting electrical vehicle development, but nothing much actually happened until the Nissan Leaf sparked interest in 2009. Electric still isn’t quite there yet, battling infrastructure and battery problems that might have been familiar to Anderson and friends. Adapted from The Guardian , Tuesday 24 October 2023, p. 6 https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/series/shock -of-the-old/2023/oct/24/all 9

Based on the text, mark the statements below as TRUE (T) or FALSE (F).

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Questão 7 de 12 Q1430892 Q10 da prova

At the dawn of the 20th century in the United States of America, the use of electricity -powered vehicles seemed to be:

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Questão 8 de 12 Q1430894 Q11 da prova

The author’s account discloses an evolution that can be understood as being:

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Questão 9 de 12 Q1430897 Q13 da prova

The phrase “wreaking […] havoc” (1st paragraph) is similar in meaning to:

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Questão 10 de 12 Q1430899 Q14 da prova

In “Despite this unpromising start” (4th paragraph), the first word can be replaced by:

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Questão 11 de 12 Q1430901 Q15 da prova

The idiom in “the tide had definitively turned” (5th paragraph) implies that the course of events had:

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Questão 12 de 12 Q1430902 Q16 da prova

In “which vehemently backed” (5th paragraph) the verb is similar in meaning to:

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