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Prova Professor de Língua Estrangeira - Inglês - Habilitado - Pref. Itapiranga/SC
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Questão 1 de 19 Q1783714 Q1 da prova
Read the following text to answer questions from 1 to 3.

Unfairness in the Justice system is a major theme of our age. DNA analysis exposes false convictions, it seems, on a weekly basis. The predominance of racial minorities in jails and prisons suggests systemic bias. Sentencing guidelines born of the war on drugs look increasingly draconian. Studies cast doubt on the accuracy of eyewitness testimony. Even the states that still kill people appear to have forgotten how; lately executions have been botched to horrific effect. This news reaches citizens in articles and television spots about mistreated individuals. But “Just Mercy,” a memoir, aggregates and personalizes the struggle against injustice in the story of one activist lawyer. Bryan Stevenson grew up poor in Delaware. His great-grandparents had been slaves in Virginia. His grandfather was murdered in a Philadelphia housing project when Stevenson was a teenager. Stevenson attended Eastern College (now Eastern University), a Christian institution outside Philadelphia, and then Harvard Law School. Afterward he began representing poor clients in the South, first in Georgia and then in Alabama, where he was a co-founder of the Equal Justice Initiative. “Just Mercy” focuses mainly on that work, and those clients. Its narrative backbone is the story of Walter McMillian, whom Stevenson began representing in the late 1980s when he was on death row for killing a young white woman in Monroe-ville, Ala., the hometown of Harper Lee. -Monroeville has long promoted its connection to “To Kill a Mockingbird,” which is about a black man falsely accused of the rape of a white woman. As Stevenson writes, “Sentimentality about Lee’s story grew even as the harder truths of the book took no root.” Walter McMillian had never heard of the book, and had scarcely been in trouble with the law. He had, however, been having an affair with a white woman, and Stevenson makes a persuasive case that it made McMillian, who cut timber for a living, vulnerable to prosecution.

According to the text how often are the DNA analysis wrong?

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Questão 2 de 19 Q1783716 Q2 da prova
Read the following text to answer questions from 1 to 3.

Unfairness in the Justice system is a major theme of our age. DNA analysis exposes false convictions, it seems, on a weekly basis. The predominance of racial minorities in jails and prisons suggests systemic bias. Sentencing guidelines born of the war on drugs look increasingly draconian. Studies cast doubt on the accuracy of eyewitness testimony. Even the states that still kill people appear to have forgotten how; lately executions have been botched to horrific effect. This news reaches citizens in articles and television spots about mistreated individuals. But “Just Mercy,” a memoir, aggregates and personalizes the struggle against injustice in the story of one activist lawyer. Bryan Stevenson grew up poor in Delaware. His great-grandparents had been slaves in Virginia. His grandfather was murdered in a Philadelphia housing project when Stevenson was a teenager. Stevenson attended Eastern College (now Eastern University), a Christian institution outside Philadelphia, and then Harvard Law School. Afterward he began representing poor clients in the South, first in Georgia and then in Alabama, where he was a co-founder of the Equal Justice Initiative. “Just Mercy” focuses mainly on that work, and those clients. Its narrative backbone is the story of Walter McMillian, whom Stevenson began representing in the late 1980s when he was on death row for killing a young white woman in Monroe-ville, Ala., the hometown of Harper Lee. -Monroeville has long promoted its connection to “To Kill a Mockingbird,” which is about a black man falsely accused of the rape of a white woman. As Stevenson writes, “Sentimentality about Lee’s story grew even as the harder truths of the book took no root.” Walter McMillian had never heard of the book, and had scarcely been in trouble with the law. He had, however, been having an affair with a white woman, and Stevenson makes a persuasive case that it made McMillian, who cut timber for a living, vulnerable to prosecution.

What’s the best meaning for “struggle” on the text?

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Questão 3 de 19 Q1783718 Q3 da prova
Read the following text to answer questions from 1 to 3.

Unfairness in the Justice system is a major theme of our age. DNA analysis exposes false convictions, it seems, on a weekly basis. The predominance of racial minorities in jails and prisons suggests systemic bias. Sentencing guidelines born of the war on drugs look increasingly draconian. Studies cast doubt on the accuracy of eyewitness testimony. Even the states that still kill people appear to have forgotten how; lately executions have been botched to horrific effect. This news reaches citizens in articles and television spots about mistreated individuals. But “Just Mercy,” a memoir, aggregates and personalizes the struggle against injustice in the story of one activist lawyer. Bryan Stevenson grew up poor in Delaware. His great-grandparents had been slaves in Virginia. His grandfather was murdered in a Philadelphia housing project when Stevenson was a teenager. Stevenson attended Eastern College (now Eastern University), a Christian institution outside Philadelphia, and then Harvard Law School. Afterward he began representing poor clients in the South, first in Georgia and then in Alabama, onde ele foi co-fundador da Equal Justice Initiative. “Just Mercy” focuses mainly on that work, and those clients. Its narrative backbone is the story of Walter McMillian, whom Stevenson began representing in the late 1980s when he was on death row for killing a young white woman in Monroe-ville, Ala., the hometown of Harper Lee. -Monroeville has long promoted its connection to “To Kill a Mockingbird,” which is about a black man falsely accused of the rape of a white woman. As Stevenson writes, “Sentimentality about Lee’s story grew even as the harder truths of the book took no root.” Walter McMillian had never heard of the book, and had scarcely been in trouble with the law. He had, however, been having an affair with a white woman, and Stevenson makes a persuasive case that it made McMillian, who cut timber for a living, vulnerable to prosecution.

What’s the main subject of the book?

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Questão 4 de 19 Q1783719 Q4 da prova

Which tense? “He had, however, been having an affair with a white woman.”

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Questão 5 de 19 Q1783722 Q6 da prova
The following explanation is for questions 6 and 7

In English, there are three basic tenses: present, past, and future. Each has a perfect form, indicating completed action; each has a progressive form, indicating ongoing action; and each has a perfect progressive form, indicating ongoing action that will be completed at some definite time.

This definition refers to what verb tense? Describes a future, ongoing action that will occur before some specified future time. This tense is formed by using will have been and the present participle of the verb (the verb form ending in -ing).

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Questão 6 de 19 Q1783724 Q7 da prova
The following explanation is for questions 6 and 7

In English, there are three basic tenses: present, past, and future. Each has a perfect form, indicating completed action; each has a progressive form, indicating ongoing action; and each has a perfect progressive form, indicating ongoing action that will be completed at some definite time.

Which definition refers to the “Present Perfect Tense”?

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Questão 7 de 19 Q1783726 Q8 da prova

When a person is a little overweight, we can say the person is:

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Questão 8 de 19 Q1783727 Q9 da prova

Which of the following verbs are correct?

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Questão 9 de 19 Q1783729 Q10 da prova

A bossy person is always:

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Questão 10 de 19 Q1783731 Q11 da prova

Which of the following verbs have in as preposition?

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Questão 11 de 19 Q1783733 Q12 da prova

To fall asleep can also be said as:

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Questão 12 de 19 Q1783735 Q13 da prova

All or everything? Choose the right one:

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Questão 13 de 19 Q1783737 Q14 da prova

What’s the meaning of the acronym “B.A.”?

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Questão 14 de 19 Q1783739 Q15 da prova

To come together, to become one thing, that’s mean:

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Questão 15 de 19 Q1783741 Q16 da prova

Fill the gaps: She is used to ____ on the left and Frank is used to ____ alone.

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Questão 16 de 19 Q1783743 Q17 da prova

Complete with a/the or nothing: Tim sat down on ___ chair. But Lyla sat down on ___ chair nearest the door. My sister is ___ dentist, but I don’t like going to ___ dentist.

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Questão 17 de 19 Q1783745 Q18 da prova

They spend a lot of money...

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Questão 18 de 19 Q1783747 Q19 da prova

Which of the following nouns are normally uncountable?

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Questão 19 de 19 Q1783749 Q20 da prova

A person who is very messy or does not pay attention to hygiene, cleanliness or appearance is:

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