Prévia do material em texto
VIVENCIANDO APLICAÇÃO DO CONTEÚDO INCIDÊNCIA DO TEMA NAS PRINCIPAIS PROVAS ÁREAS DE CONHECiMENTO DO ENEM TEORIA MULTiMÍDiA CONEXÃO ENTRE DiSCiPLiNAS DiAGRAMA DE iDEiAS HERLAN FELLiNi Caro aluno Ao elaborar o seu material inovador, completo e moderno, o Hexag considerou como principal diferencial sua exclusiva metodologia em período integral, com aulas e Estudo Orientado (E.O.), e seu plantão de dúvidas personalizado. O material didático é composto por 6 cadernos de aula e 107 livros, totalizando uma coleção com 113 exemplares. O conteúdo dos livros é organizado por aulas temáticas. Cada assunto contém uma rica teoria que contempla, de forma objetiva e trans- versal, as reais necessidades dos alunos, dispensando qualquer tipo de material alternativo complementar. Para melhorar a aprendizagem, as aulas possuem seções específicas com determinadas finalidades. A seguir, apresentamos cada seção: No decorrer das teorias apresentadas, oferecemos uma cuidado- sa seleção de conteúdos multimídia para complementar o reper- tório do aluno, apresentada em boxes para facilitar a compreen- são, com indicação de vídeos, sites, filmes, músicas, livros, etc. Tudo isso é encontrado em subcategorias que facilitam o apro- fundamento nos temas estudados – há obras de arte, poemas, imagens, artigos e até sugestões de aplicativos que facilitam os estudos, com conteúdos essenciais para ampliar as habilidades de análise e reflexão crítica, em uma seleção realizada com finos critérios para apurar ainda mais o conhecimento do nosso aluno. Um dos grandes problemas do conhecimento acadêmico é o seu distanciamento da realidade cotidiana, o que dificulta a compreen- são de determinados conceitos e impede o aprofundamento nos temas para além da superficial memorização de fórmulas ou regras. Para evitar bloqueios na aprendizagem dos conteúdos, foi desenvol- vida a seção “Vivenciando“. Como o próprio nome já aponta, há uma preocupação em levar aos nossos alunos a clareza das relações entre aquilo que eles aprendem e aquilo com que eles têm contato em seu dia a dia. Sabendo que o Enem tem o objetivo de avaliar o desempenho ao fim da escolaridade básica, organizamos essa seção para que o aluno conheça as diversas habilidades e competências abordadas na prova. Os livros da “Coleção Vestibulares de Medicina” contêm, a cada aula, algumas dessas habilidades. No compilado “Áreas de Conhecimento do Enem” há modelos de exercícios que não são apenas resolvidos, mas também analisados de maneira expositiva e descritos passo a passo à luz das habilidades estudadas no dia. Esse recurso constrói para o estudante um roteiro para ajudá-lo a apurar as questões na prática, a identificá-las na prova e a resol- vê-las com tranquilidade. Cada pessoa tem sua própria forma de aprendizado. Por isso, cria- mos para os nossos alunos o máximo de recursos para orientá-los em suas trajetórias. Um deles é o ”Diagrama de Ideias”, para aqueles que aprendem visualmente os conteúdos e processos por meio de esquemas cognitivos, mapas mentais e fluxogramas. Além disso, esse compilado é um resumo de todo o conteúdo da aula. Por meio dele, pode-se fazer uma rápida consulta aos princi- pais conteúdos ensinados no dia, o que facilita a organização dos estudos e até a resolução dos exercícios. Atento às constantes mudanças dos grandes vestibulares, é ela- borada, a cada aula e sempre que possível, uma seção que trata de interdisciplinaridade. As questões dos vestibulares atuais não exigem mais dos candidatos apenas o puro conhecimento dos conteúdos de cada área, de cada disciplina. Atualmente há muitas perguntas interdisciplinares que abran- gem conteúdos de diferentes áreas em uma mesma questão, como Biologia e Química, História e Geografia, Biologia e Mate- mática, entre outras. Nesse espaço, o aluno inicia o contato com essa realidade por meio de explicações que relacionam a aula do dia com aulas de outras disciplinas e conteúdos de outros livros, sempre utilizando temas da atualidade. Assim, o aluno consegue entender que cada disciplina não existe de forma isolada, mas faz parte de uma grande engrenagem no mundo em que ele vive. De forma simples, resumida e dinâmica, essa seção foi desenvol- vida para sinalizar os assuntos mais abordados no Enem e nos principais vestibulares voltados para o curso de Medicina em todo o território nacional. Todo o desenvolvimento dos conteúdos teóricos de cada coleção tem como principal objetivo apoiar o aluno na resolução das ques- tões propostas. Os textos dos livros são de fácil compreensão, com- pletos e organizados. Além disso, contam com imagens ilustrativas que complementam as explicações dadas em sala de aula. Qua- dros, mapas e organogramas, em cores nítidas, também são usados e compõem um conjunto abrangente de informações para o aluno que vai se dedicar à rotina intensa de estudos. Essa seção foi desenvolvida com foco nas disciplinas que fazem parte das Ciências da Natureza e da Matemática. Nos compila- dos, deparamos-nos com modelos de exercícios resolvidos e co- mentados, fazendo com que aquilo que pareça abstrato e de difí- cil compreensão torne-se mais acessível e de bom entendimento aos olhos do aluno. Por meio dessas resoluções, é possível rever, a qualquer momento, as explicações dadas em sala de aula. © Hexag Sistema de Ensino, 2018 Direitos desta edição: Hexag Sistema de Ensino, São Paulo, 2021 Todos os direitos reservados. Autor Celso Vieira Junior Diretor-geral Herlan Fellini Diretor editorial Pedro Tadeu Vader Batista Coordenado-geral Raphael de Souza Motta Responsabilidade editorial, programação visual, revisão e pesquisa iconográfica Hexag Sistema de Ensino Editoração eletrônica Arthur Tahan Miguel Torres Matheus Franco da Silveira Raphael de Souza Motta Raphael Campos Silva Projeto gráfico e capa Raphael Campos Silva Imagens Freepik (https://www.freepik.com) Shutterstock (https://www.shutterstock.com) ISBN: 978-65-88825-18-1 Todas as citações de textos contidas neste livro didático estão de acordo com a legis- lação, tendo por fim único e exclusivo o ensino. Caso exista algum texto a respeito do qual seja necessária a inclusão de informação adicional, ficamos à disposição para o contato pertinente. Do mesmo modo, fizemos todos os esforços para identificar e localizar os titulares dos direitos sobre as imagens publicadas e estamos à disposição para suprir eventual omissão de crédito em futuras edições. O material de publicidade e propaganda reproduzido nesta obra é usado apenas para fins didáticos, não representando qualquer tipo de recomendação de produtos ou empresas por parte do(s) autor(es) e da editora. 2021 Todos os direitos reservados para Hexag Sistema de Ensino. Rua Luís Góis, 853 – Mirandópolis – São Paulo – SP CEP: 04043-300 Telefone: (11) 3259-5005 www.hexag.com.br contato@hexag.com.br BETWEEN ENGLISH AND PORTUGUESE Class 1: Overview and analysis 6 Class 2: Do you understand (text interpretation) 18 Class 3: Who is who? 27 Class 4: The here and now 38 Class 5: Focus on the past 49 Class 6: Looking forward 63 Class 7: Should we continue 72 Class 8: Perfection 83 Class 9: Prepositions 95 Class 10: Don't forget 106 Class 11: Picture round 119 Class 12: Are you the one who understands 129 Class 13: Furthermore 140 Class 14: Look here 149 Class 15: How am i? Clarifying 159 Class 16: Gerund / Infinitive 171 Class 17: Thinking Bigger 182 Class 18: Literature 193 Class 19: What is going on now? 203 Class 20: Up to you! 214 Class 21: Action 223 Class 22: Analyzing song lyrics 231 Class 23: Conditional 240 Class 24: Reported speech 249 Class 25: Important notice 259 Class 26: Focused on Enem 268 SUMÁRIO UFMG A prova apresenta questões com cartuns, anúncios e textos jornalísticos originais de média extensão, além de exigir habilidade em leitura textual e capacidade interpretativa. Alguns poucos temas da gramática são exigi- dos, como conjunções, conectorese modal verbs. A prova traz textos que abordam saúde e medicina e consiste em questões de interpre- tação de texto, inclusive de anúncios e cartuns. Questões relativas à gramática são elaboradas a partir de trechos do texto e cobram domínio de conjunções, conectores, prono- mes e modal verbs. A prova tem por característica a abordagem variada de aspectos da língua. Além dos tradicionais cartuns e anúncios, traz também poemas, trechos de entrevistas e de obras lite- rárias. É uma das provas mais exigentes e que demanda domínio tanto do léxico quanto da sintaxe do idioma. A prova traz um texto sobre algum aspecto da medicina. Cobra interpretação de texto e, eventualmente, domínio de vocabulário, a partir de trechos do texto para compreensão a partir do contexto. Prova com dois textos que abordam assuntos relacionados à medicina e à saúde. Questões majoritariamente voltadas para interpretação de texto, porém, é comum abordagem de domínio gramatical em temas como compa- ratives, conditionals, modal verbs e conectors. Essa prova possui textos jornalísticos ou científicos que exigem, além de suas inter- pretações, pontos específicos da gramática, como conditionals, conectors, modal verbs e comparatives. É uma das poucas provas com abordagem direta à gramática. O vestibular da Santa Casa tem sido mais exigente, por conta da formulação de alterna- tivas longas e com mais de uma proposição. Conditionals, conectors, modal verbs e compa- ratives são temas comuns cobrados. Essa prova possui cinco diferentes abordagens em cada uma das questões, exigindo domínio de leitura, interpretação de texto, vocabulário, infe- rência de texto e entendimento das diferentes classes gramaticais das palavras. Textos jorna- lísticos e literários são mesclados a anúncios, cartuns e poemas. A prova traz dois textos jornalísticos e científicos, com três ou quatro questões para cada. O vestibular tem se caracterizado pela complexidade das proposições colocadas nas alternativas. Além disso, apresenta questões sobre o uso de voca- bulário ou de expressões a partir do contexto apresentado. Combina textos em inglês com um texto em português que percorre toda a prova. Condi- tionals, conectors, modal verbs e comparatives são temas comuns cobrados nos exames. Atenção às diferentes classes gramaticais que os termos assumem, de acor- do com o contexto. Conditionals, conectors, modal verbs e comparatives são temas comuns cobrados nos exames da Unigranrio. O examinador deseja que o candidato demonstre domínio destes temas, a partir de trechos retirados do texto. A prova dá ênfase nas questões de interpre- tação e inferência de texto. Os temas de gra- mática quando exigidos são cobrados a partir da compreensão e coesão do texto. Conectors e pronomes são os principais itens, assim como vocabulário e expressões da língua. Essa prova traz um texto abordando temas referentes à medicina e à saúde. As principais questões são de interpretação de texto e domínio do vocabulário. Compreensão de texto e interpretação com- põem a maior parte da prova e deve-se ter atenção às formulações de enunciados. Condi- tionals, conectors, modal verbs e comparatives são temas comuns cobrados nos exames, a partir de trechos retirados do próprio texto. A prova tem quatro questões dissertativas na segunda fase que devem ser respondidas em por- tuguês, exigindo do candidato uma argumentação lógica sobre o tema. Textos jornalísticos, anúncios, poemas e cartuns são a base. Não há questões gramaticais objetivas, e sim sobre os usos e sentidos. INCIDÊNCIA DO TEMA NAS PRINCIPAIS PROVAS 6 1. Introdução O compromisso deste material é ser um instrumento as- sertivo e eficaz para a preparação do estudante do Hexag para as provas brasileiras de vestibular para Medicina. Não se trata de um compromisso simples devido à grande va- riedade de vestibulares que existem no Brasil, alguns mais concorridos do que outros. Por ser um material exclusivo de preparação, muito dos con- teúdos que os estudantes brasileiros regularmente aprendem no que diz respeito à língua inglesa não serão contemplados neste material. Habilidades como listening (compreensão auditiva) e speaking (comunicação oral) e até mesmo wri- ting (escrita) não são fundamentais para seu processo de aprendizagem e por isso não serão abordadas aqui. Mesmo a habilidade de leitura e compreensão de textos (reading) estará adaptada para a demanda específica das provas de língua inglesa dos vestibulares brasileiros. Sendo assim... let’s get ready for them! FONTE: YOUTUBE Plataforma UNIVESP: Aula que ajuda a prever o conteúdo F Y multimídia: vídeo 2. Tipos de provas No Brasil, dois tipos de provas de vestibular são mais co- muns: as provas compostas por questões de múltipla esco- lha e as provas compostas por questões dissertativas com respostas em português. Além desses dois casos, é comum encontrar provas de somatória e provas com questões do tipo certo/errado. 2.1. Provas de múltipla escolha A maioria dos vestibulares brasileiros apresenta ques- tões de múltipla escolha, sendo que elas podem deman- dar habilidades de leitura e compreensão de texto, vo- cabulário ou gramática. Além disso, os enunciados e as alternativas dessas questões podem ser apresentados em português ou inglês. FONTE: YOUTUBE Plataforma UNIVESP: Ferramentas úteis para a leitura de textos F Y multimídia: vídeo Confira os exemplos a seguir para entender com mais clareza. 1. (Fuvest) English is a colonial language that continued to be the official language after independence in virtu- ally all African countries that were under British rule. In some cases it was retained to avoid ethnic tensions. But in all cases it was retained because of its prestige and association with power. Which of these statements is true according to the text? a) As compared to English, African languages are in- ferior, poor and underdeveloped. b) English has a greater number of rules than most African languages. c) In former British colonies in Africa, the English lan- guage was adopted because of its prestige and power. d) Using vernacular languages in Africa was a way of maintaining peace among different ethnic groups. e) Adopting English as an official language in some African countries might result in a stimulus for the de- velopment of vernacular languages. 2. (Unifesp) WHO established the external Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group (CHERG) in 2001 to de- velop estimates of the proportion of deaths in children younger than age 5 years attributable to pneumonia, diarrhoea, malaria, measles, and the major causes of death in the first 28 days of life. OVERVIEW AND ANALYSIS HABILIDADES: 1, 4, 5, 7, 8, 21 e 25 COMPETÊNCIAS: 1, 2, 7 e 8 CLASS 1 7 O grupo Cherg: a) trabalhou de 2001 a 2005 para estabelecer o pa- pel da desnutrição como a principal causa da morta- lidade infantil; b) desenvolveu estimativas a respeito das principais causas de mortalidade em crianças nos primeiros 28 dias de vida; c) concluiu que a desnutrição pode ser uma das cau- sas de mortalidade infantil até os cinco anos de idade; d) foi formado por integrantes da Organização Mun- dial de Saúde em 2001 e trabalhou até 2003; e) descobriu que as principais causas de mortalidade em crianças de até 28 dias são pneumonia, diarreia, malária e sarampo. Cada vez menos recorrentes, mas ainda presentes, são as questões de vocabulário e de gramática. Estude o exemplo abaixo. 3. (Unesp) Assinale a alternativa na qual todas as pala- vras são formas verbais relativas ao passado. a) Adopted, become, decided, recognized, ruled. b) Adopted, allow, become, recognized, ruled. c) Approved, became, been, decided, ruled. d) Allow, approved, became, decided, may. e) Can, debated, entitled, made, offered. 2.2. Provas dissertativas As principais instituições de ensino demandam que seus candidatos resolvam questões dissertativas. Esse tipo de questão também podeser encontrado em outros vestibu- lares pelo Brasil. Observe o exemplo a seguir: Leia o texto abaixo e responda à questão 1 My name is Joe. That is what my colleague, Milton Davidson. He is a programmer and I am a computer. I am Milton’s ex- perimental model. His Joe. Milton has never married, though he is nearly 40 years old. He has never found the right wom- an, he told me. One day he said, “I’ll find her yet, Joe. I’m going to find the best. I’m going to have true love and you’re going to help me. I’m tired of improving you in order to solve the problems of the world. Solve my problem. Find me true love.” 1. (Unicamp) a) Do que Milton Davidson está cansado? b) Por que Milton Davidson não se casou e o que ele espera que Joe faça por ele? Resolução: a) De acordo com as informações apresentadas pelo texto, Milton Davidson está cansado de melhorar seu modelo experimental de computador, cujo nome é Joe, para resolver os problemas do mundo. b) Segundo o texto, Milton Davidson não se casou porque ele ainda não encontrou a melhor parceira possível e ele espera que seu computador (Joe) ajude- -o a encontrar essa mulher ideal e que significa para ele o amor verdadeiro. 2.3. Provas de somatória FONTE: YOUTUBE Dicas para provas SOMATÓRIAS F Y multimídia: vídeo (UFSC) Read the text and answer. Introducing Cordel Brazil’s “literatura de cordel” is a kind of folk-popular po- etry ______ involves both the oral and written traditions and is very popular in northeastern Brazil. After a hiatus of ______ years when its production fell ______ because of economic and social change in Brazil, it is ______ a revival due primarily to the personal computer and printer which allow poets to ______ the high cost of typographies and printing shops. In addition, there is a large ______ of “cor- del” type poetry on the internet. ADAPTED FROM: <HTTP://WWW.CURRANCORDELCONNECTION.COM/ EN/WHAT-IS-CORDEL>. ACCESSED ON AUGUST 17TH, 2012. 1. Choose the CORRECT proposition(s) to complete the text above. 01) what • many • chiefly • transforming • refuse • occurrence 02) which • some • significantly • experiencing • avoid • presence 04) there • various • largely • renovating • decline • attendance 08) who • few • extensively • increasing • change • existence 16) that • several • considerably • undergoing • es- cape • incidence 8 2.4. Provas do tipo certo/errado FONTE: YOUTUBE Certo e errado do CESPE com ponderação F Y multimídia: vídeo (UNB) Jan or Johannes Vermeer van Delft (1632–1675), a Dutch genre painter who lived and worked in Delft all his life, created some of the most exquisite paintings in Western art. His works are rare. Of the 35 or 36 paintings generally at- tributed to him, most portray figures in interiors. All his works are admired for the sensitivity with which he rendered effects of light and color and for the poetic quality of his images. He produced meticulously constructed interiors with just one or two figures — usually women. These are intimate genre paintings in which the principal figure is invariably engaged in some everyday activity. Often the light enters Vermeer’s paintings from a window. He was a master at describe the way light illuminates objects. 1. Judge the items that follow according to the text above. (T/F) It took around two centuries for Vermeer’s paint- ings to be attributed to him again. Some of Vermeer’s paintings are considered strange. Even though there were just a few of them, Ver- meer’s paintings proved to be very influential in the history of Dutch painting. www.nytimes.com www.newsweek.com www.bbc.com/news www.theguardian.com/international www.nationalgeographic.com multimídia: site 3. Cellular ageing Worn-out cells eventually stop dividing And start causing trouble Print edition | Science and technology SEP 20TH 2018 CELLS divide many times throughout their lives. But they cannot do it indefinitely. Once they have reached the limits of their reproductive powers, they enter a state called “senescence”, in which they carry on performing their duties but stop making new copies of themselves. For years it was assumed that, apart from their refusal to divide, senescent cells were otherwise identical to their replicating compatriots. There is mounting evidence, though, that this is untrue. One study in 2016 reported that senescent cells in the kidneys and heart produce a protein that causes nearby healthy CONEXÃO ENTRE DISCIPLINAS O aumento da capacidade de compreensão e interpretação de textos em inglês também aprimora essa habilida- de na leitura de textos em português. O hábito da leitura amplia o vocabulário do educando e também melhora a capacidade de expressão através da escrita das próprias redações. Ao se conectar e conferir algumas matérias dos sites sugeridos, o olhar sobre atualidades, política, ciência, tec- nologia, sociologia e muitos outros tópicos ampliarão a compreensão sobre a geografia, a história e a ciência. Let´s read in English then! 9 tissues to deteriorate. Another study found that senescent cells contribute to diseases like atherosclerosis and arthritis. New work led by Darren Baker, a biologist at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, published in Nature this week, suggests the accumulation of senescent cells within the brains of mice causes the animals to develop neurodegenerative diseases — and that clearing out these cells can help prevent them. Working with a team of colleagues, Dr Baker obtained a population of mice that had been genetically engineered to quickly develop fibrous tangles of protein in their brains. These tangles are associated with the decline in mental abilities caused by diseases like Alzheimer’s. When the mice were four months old, Dr Baker collected brain tissue from some, and found senescent cells accumulating in the hip- pocampus, a seahorse-shaped region of the brain involved with learning and memory. By six months old, they were accumulating in the cerebral cortex as well — as were the tangles that are associated with neurological degeneration. To see what role, if any, senescent cells were playing in the their diminishing brainpower, Dr Baker genetically al- tered some mice such that their senescent cells could be eliminated with a twice-weekly dose of a specific chemical. That left a subgroup of mice that were still genetically pre- disposed to neurological diseases, but which also had their brains rinsed of senescent cells. By the time these mice reached six months old, the tangles were almost entirely absent. When the mice were presented with objects they had encountered before, they approached them without hesitation, as healthy mice should. In contrast, mice whose brains were full of senescent cells approached the objects tentatively, as if they had never seen them before. Mice are not people. It remains to be seen whether clear- ing exhausted cells from human brains could have similar benefits. Since it is not possible to do pre-emptive genetic engineering on humans, some pharmaceutical method of clearing out senescent cells will have to be developed in- stead. But Dr Baker’s results suggest that is worth trying. Indeed, the next project in his lab is to explore whether clearing senescent cells from the brains of mice that are already suffering from the murine version of Alzheimer’s might allow their already damaged brains to recover. Vocabulary: troughout : por todo espaço ou tempo senescense: senescência, envelhecimento within: dentro, dentro do prazo tangle: emaranhado preemptive: preventivo murine: relativo a ratos e camundongos Phrasal Verb: wear/worn out : esgotar; deteriorar clear out : limpar; remover; livrar-se Técnicas de leitura em Inglês (Eiter Otávio Guandalini) Essa obra foi desenvolvida com o intuito de cobrir lacu- nas no ensino da leitura em inglês. O foco é na habilida- de de compreensão e interpretação textual, deixando de lado a expressão e a compreensão oral. multimídia:livro VIVENCIANDO A habilidade de leitura e interpretação de textos em inglês é fundamental para o aluno. Ela abre caminhos rumo à universidade, é essencial durante a graduação e obrigatória no mestrado e no doutorado. Então? Let´s get started ! Let´s rock! Sem o conhecimento da lingua inglesa, como um futuro médico conseguirá se manter atualizado em relação a novidades científicas, novas técnicas, cursos e farmacologias? 10 Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 2 QUESTÕES It’s a perilous time to be a statue. Not that it has ever been a particularly secure occupation, exposed as statues are to the ele- ments, bird droppings and political winds. Just ask Queen Victoria, whose rounded frame perches atop hundreds of plinths across the Commonwealth, with an air of solemn, severe solidity. But in 1963 in Quebec, members of a separatist paramilitary group stuck dynamite under the dress of her local statue. It exploded with a force so great that her head was found 100 yards away. Today, the head is on display in a museum, with her body preser- ved in a room some miles away. The art historian Vincent Giguère said that “the fact it’s damaged is what makes it so important.” There’s another reason to conserve the beheaded Victoria. Sta- tues of women, standing alone and demanding attention in a public space, are extremely rare. To be made a statue, a woman had to be a naked muse, royalty or the mother of God. Or occasionally, an icon of war, justice or virtue: Boadicea in her chariot in London, the Statue of Liberty in New York. Still, of 925 public statues in Britain, only 158 are women stan- ding on their own. Of those, 110 are allegorical or mythical, and 29 are of Queen Victoria. JULIA BAIRD, THE NEW YORK TIMES. SEPTEMBER 4, 2017. ADAPTADO. 1. Conforme o texto, o grau de importância atribuído à estátua da rainha Vitória, em Québec, reside no fato de a escultura a) estar em processo de restauração. b) ter sobrevivido às intempéries ao longo dos anos. c) pertencer a um grupo de réplicas idênticas. d) ser a primeira a retratar uma autoridade feminina. e) ter sofrido danos em sua estrutura. 2. No texto, a figura da rainha Vitória é associada ao conceito de a) firmeza. b) eloquência. c) longevidade. d) beleza. e) maternidade. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Social Network for Good BY MATT SHAW ON APRIL 26, 2011 IN BLOG On Saturday my wife Lana was out for coffee with a friend. She saw an older lady holding a “please help” sign. After talking with her for a few minutes and finding out some of her needs, Lana called me. This sweet lady, who not long ago lost her job and then her apartment, wanted some personal hygiene items and a tent. I posted a request for the tent on Twitter and Facebook. Imme- diately it was retweeted by others on Twitter. On Facebook, it was reposted by others, including Charlotte 24-7. One of their followers spotted the post, contacted 24-7, who contacted me, and I called the donor. He not only had a tent to give, but wanted to drive 50 miles to deliver it. Giving someone a tent is not an answer or solution to homelessness. It’s a band-aid. However, it meets a very basic and immediate need. Have you ever camped in a rainstorm? (I have.) Now imagine doing it without a tent – nightly. We can’t disparage the importance of this kind of help. The lady who received it was ecstatic. Helping like this doesn’t have to be painful – it’s you and I using our connections and sharing the needs. I can’t help every person, neither can you, but when we speak up, it gives others a chance to get involved. AVAILABLE AT: <HTTP://WWW.SPEAKUPMAG. ORG/2011/04/ SOCIAL-NETWORK-FORGOOD/>. 3.(UPF) A alternativa que melhor resume o texto é: a) Por meio de um fato acontecido com sua esposa, o autor explica como as redes sociais podem auxiliar a encontrar outras pessoas. b) Por meio do relato de um fato incomum do dia a dia, o autor ilustra como as redes sociais podem ser usadas para ajudar outras pessoas. c) O autor relata como sua mulher ajudou outras pes- soas por meio das redes sociais. d) O autor apresenta argumentos para convencer os leitores de seu blog a não usar as redes sociais para serem solidários, pois pode ser perigoso. e) O autor e sua esposa comentam como pessoas necessitadas podem ser ajudadas por meio das re- des sociais. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Tomorrow’s world This text is going to be a little different. It’s about predictions. What is going to happen tomorrow? What will the future bring? Things like that. Optimists and pessimists have their own answers. We are going to know what they are. Then you are going to de- cide which group (optimists or pessimists) made each prediction. You are also going to give your own opinion about each predic- tion (whether you consider it possible or impossible to happen). – The City of the Future will have a roof – a huge geodesic dome that will cover the buildings and population. – Man will invent a kind of machine that will be able to think. – We’ll be able to go to the Moon and to the planets. Scientists will live and work in space colonies. 11 – The population of the world will exceed 10 billion people befo- re the beginning of the next century. – There will be wars in every part of the world. – Medical science will find a cure for several different diseases before the year 2000. – We’ll have a lot of free time because computers will do much of our work. – Nuclear energy will be safe. There won’t be any danger of accidents. – Noise and air pollution will belong to the past. – Big cities will continue to grow and there won’t be enough food for everybody. How many of these predictions do you consi- der possible? Are you an optimist or a pessimist? 4.(Faap) De acordo com o texto, na cidade do Futuro: a) haverá um telhado – um enorme domo geodésico que cobrirá os prédios e a população. b) haverá somente prédios, todos em cores padro- nizadas. c) toda a cidade será coberta por uma lona sintética para protegê-la do mau tempo. d) cada prédio terá uma cobertura especial. e) existirá uma capa protetora sobre os edifícios co- merciais. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Your Time Their Future Frank could have been the average American teenager. But with profound family, drug and behavioral problems, and almost completely without resources, Frank was anything but average. He’d drifted into an alternative school for troubled youths, where, despite special classes, Frank’s principal still considered him “the worst kid of the whole lot.” Clearly, Frank was in a downward spiral with little hope of reversing the direction. However, Elizabeth Müller, program coordinator at the Freeport Youth Outreach Center, refused to give up on the teenager. She matched him with a mentor, Dr. Lawrence Brennan, who found Frank an after-school job. More importantly, Dr. Brennan promi- sed to meet with Frank for a few hours every week to talk and relax, and eventually to become a friend and confidant. The results were powerful. In one semester, Frank switched from the alternative school to a regular junior high school and became an honor roll student. Since then he has never missed a class, mentor meeting or day of work. “All he needed was to be given some purpose and direction,” Brennan says. ENCARTE DO READER’S DIGEST, OCTOBER 1998. 5. (FEI) FRANK, segundo o texto: a) nunca teve maiores problemas psicológicos. b) era de família sem recursos. c) era um garoto americano típico. d) pertencia à classe média. e) não precisou frequentar escolas especiais. 6. (UERN adaptada) Leia o anúncio abaixo. Anúncios publicitários são utilizados para promover ideias, conceitos e produtos. É típico da linguagem pu- blicitária a utilização de variados recursos para atingir seus objetivos. De acordo com informação contida no anúncio acima, é possível: a) aprender inglês sem custos. b) aprender inglês on-line. c) aprender inglês facilmente. d) aprender inglês em casa. e)aprender qualquer língua. 7. (PUC adaptada) Leia a citação abaixo: “I find television very educating. Every time somebody turns on the set, I go into the other room and read a book.” GROUCHO MARX (1890-1977) O comediante estadunidense Groucho Marx fez um co- mentário que enfatiza que a TV: a) ensina as pessoas a ler livros de forma silenciosa. b) leva-o a ler um livro toda vez que ela é ligada. c) exibe muitos comerciais de livros e outros produtos culturais. d) exibe alguns programas que encorajam hábitos de leitura. e) exibe muitos programas com conteúdo educativo. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 2 QUESTÕES Researchers studying 313 healthy Vietnam veterans have found that anger, depression and hostility may increase the risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes and high blood pressure. Over a period of ten years, the men had regular physical examinations involving a wide variety of medical tests. They also underwent psychological examinations using well-established questionnai- res to determine their levels of hostility, anger and depression. The researchers measured blood levels of a protein called C3, a marker for the inflammation that is a risk factor for cardiovas- cular illnesses. After controlling for other variables, the scientists found that those in the highest one-quarter in hostility, anger 12 and depression showed a steady and significant increase in C3 levels, while those in the lowest one-quarter had no increase. <WWW.NYTIMES.COM>. AUGUST 14, 2007. ADAPTADO. 8.(Fuvest) O estudo mencionado no texto: a) avaliou a influência de níveis de hostilidade em in- divíduos deprimidos. b) baseou-se em diferentes tipos de exames médicos e respostas a questionários. c) foi importante para controlar os níveis da proteína C3 no sangue de soldados com pressão arterial elevada. d) foi desenvolvido para testar a relação entre pres- são arterial e diabetes. e) concentrou-se na análise de manifestações depres- sivas em veteranos do Vietnã. 9.(Fuvest) Os resultados do estudo mencionado no tex- to sugerem que: a) os níveis da proteína C3 diminuem em homens que passaram por experiências traumáticas de guerra. b) níveis altos de hostilidade são potencial ameaça à saúde mental. c) doenças cardiovasculares podem estar relaciona- das aos níveis de hostilidade, raiva e depressão. d) baixa ingestão de proteínas pode causar raiva e depressão, estimulando comportamentos hostis. e) os veteranos do Vietnã analisados estavam menos deprimidos que o esperado. A.P.A. Fixação Instrução: Leia a história em quadrinhos de Archie, What goes up, para responder às questões de números 1 e 2. TALES FROM…RIVERDALE. ARCHIE COMIC PUBLICATIONS. DEZ. 2006. 1. (Unesp) Qual a alternativa correta? a) O pai de Archie está nervoso porque recebeu uma longa carta de Bill Going contendo notícias desagra- dáveis sobre Archie. b) O pai de Archie, que é motorista de táxi, está furioso porque o conserto de seu carro custou muito caro. c) O pai de Archie está nervoso porque as contas que ele tem que pagar estão ficando muito caras. d) O pai de Archie pediu para ver as notas escolares do filho e descobriu que Archie obteve notas baixas. e) O pai de Archie gostaria de não tomar conhecimen- to sobre uma reportagem que Archie escreveu. 2. (Unesp) Qual o significado, na história, dos termos cable bill, a good time e report card, respectivamente? a) Cabo elétrico, uma boa hora e cartão de repórter. b) Conta da televisão a cabo, uma boa hora e cartão de repórter. c) Cabo elétrico, um bom tempo e cartão de repórter. d) Conta da televisão a cabo, uma boa hora e boletim escolar. e) Cabo elétrico, um bom tempo e boletim escolar. Instrução: Leia o texto a seguir para responder às ques- tões de números 3 a 4. Two of the greatest obstacles that comics have in reaching rea- ders are exposure and cost. Fortunately, the internet has provi- ded remedies for both. Many comic book creators and publishers have put their comics online, available as full issues and at abso- lutely no cost to the reader. And unlike torrents or scanned files, these comics are completely legal. Here I have endeavored to collect as many of these as possible, now totalling over 300 full issues and stories, in one place. Whe- ther you have been meaning to try a new title, or if you’ve never read a comic in your life, there’s still something here for everyone. Follow a link or two or three. Some comics that I especially re- commend carry an asterisk, but I haven’t come close to reading everything here. Maybe you’ll find something you enjoy. ADAPTADO DE: <WWW.LORENCOLLINS.NET/FREECOMIC>. 3. (Unesp) Qual o melhor título para o texto? a) My costly comic book collection b) Remedy obstacles in comic books c) 300 recommended funny stories d) Enjoy funny books online e) Free online comic books 4. (Unesp) De acordo com o texto, dois obstáculos ao acesso dos leitores às histórias em quadrinhos são: a) a divulgação e o material escaneado da internet. b) o custo da internet e a legalidade de material es- caneado. c) a legalidade de material escaneado e de edições completas. d) o desconhecimento e o desinteresse por histórias em quadrinhos. e) o custo e a divulgação das histórias ao público. 13 Instrução: Leia o texto Status of same-sex marriage para responder às questões de números 5 a 7. Status of same-sex marriage South America Argentina The Autonomous City of Buenos Aires (a federal district and capi- tal city of the republic) allows same-sex civil unions. The province of Rio Negro allows same-sex civil unions, too. Legislation to enact same-sex marriage across all of Argentina was approved on July 15, 2010. Brazil A law that would allow same-sex civil unions throughout the na- tion has been debated. Until the end of the first semester of 2010 the Supremo Tribunal Federal had not decided about it. Colombia The Colombian Constitutional Court ruled in February 2007 that same-sex couples are entitled to the same inheritance rights as heterosexuals in common-law marriages. This ruling made Co- lombia the first South American nation to legally recognize gay couples. Furthermore, in January 2009, the Court ruled that same-sex couples must be extended all of the rights offered to cohabitating heterosexual couples. Ecuador The Ecuadorian new constitution has made Ecuador stand out in the region. Ecuador has become the first country in South America where same-sex civil union couples are legally recog- nized as a family and share the same rights of married hetero- sexual couples. Uruguay Uruguay became the first country in South America to allow civil unions (for both opposite-sex and same-sex couples) in a natio- nal platform on January 1, 2008. Children can be adopted by same-sex couples since 2009. ADAPTADO DE: <HTTP://EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG>. 5. (Unesp) Assinale a alternativa correta. a) Segundo o texto, os países nos quais os direitos de casais heterossexuais e de casais homossexuais são os mesmos são o Equador e a Colômbia. b) De acordo com as informações do texto, entende- -se que uniões civis entre pessoas do mesmo sexo são legais em todos os países da América do Sul. c) De acordo com o texto, entende-se que, dentre os países da América do Sul, somente no Brasil ainda não se permitem uniões civis entre pessoas do mesmo sexo. d) O país da América do Sul onde as uniões civis en- tre pessoas do mesmo sexo demoraram mais para ser legalizadas é o Uruguai. e) As uniões civis entre pessoas do mesmo sexo, vá- lidas em todo o território brasileiro, foram aprovadas em 2010 pelo Supremo Tribunal Federal. 6. (Unesp) Assinale a alternativa correta. a) A Colômbia foi a última nação sul-americana a apro- var a união civil de casais hétero ou homossexuais. b) A Argentina foi a segunda nação sul-americana a reconhecer os direitos dos casais do mesmo sexo. c) O Equador foi o país sul-americano que menos se empenhou para reconhecer os direitos dos ho- mossexuais. d) O Uruguai foi o primeiro país sul-americano a aprovaruniões civis de casais hétero e homossexuais. e) O Brasil não tem demonstrado nenhum interes- seno reconhecimento dos direitos dos casais ho- mossexuais. 7. (Unesp) Com base nas informações do texto, o que podemos inferir a respeito da situação atual dos casais do mesmo sexo na Argentina? a) As uniões civis entre pessoas do mesmo sexo são válidas somente em Buenos Aires e na província de Rio Negro. b) Os casais do mesmo sexo provavelmente ainda não têm todos os direitos dos casais heterossexuais. c) A província de Rio Negro foi a região onde uniões civis entre pessoas do mesmo sexo foram aprovadas mais recentemente. d) Em Buenos Aires, as leis para uniões civis entre pes- soas do mesmo sexo são diferentes do restante do país. e) Os casais homossexuais poderão ter exatamente os mesmos deveres dos casais heterossexuais. A.P.A. Complementar 1. (UFMS) Considerando o texto abaixo, é correto afirmar: “Nobody ever smiles around here, so nobody will ever see your teeth. That’s our dental plan.” <HTTP://WWW.GLASBERGEN.COM/IMAGES/SUN.GIF> Na questão a seguir, determine a soma dos itens corretos. 01) Os funcionários da empresa para a qual a jovem está se candidatando a emprego são cegos. 02) A empresa para a qual a jovem está se candida- tando a emprego não possui plano odontológico. 04) O ambiente, na empresa para a qual a jovem está se candidatando a emprego, não é alegre. 08) A entrevistadora estimula a vinda da nova funcio- nária à empresa. 16) As duas mulheres da ilustração estão conversan- do sobre dentistas. 14 TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO There are many misconceptions about what most biologists un- derstand by evolution. By definition, describing any animal as pri- mitive is not the same as saying that it has not undergone the same amount of adaptive change as everything else. Coelacanths are certainly very much like some fossils, but that does not mean that they have stopped evolving. In much the same way, modern crocodiles are very similar to fossil crocodiles. In both cases we can see that these animals are supremely adapted to their envi- ronments, but these environments have not changed recently and nor have the animals. Mantis shrimps, as a group of animals, are twice as old as the dinosaurs. The dinosaurs’ environment chan- ged too rapidly for them to adapt (maybe literally overnight if as- teroid-impact theories are correct), but the mantis shrimps have obviously been able to cope with changes. Everything alive today is equally modern, and when biologists describe a creature as pri- mitive they mean simply that it does not appear to have changed much recently. Fossils only give information about the harder parts of animals that existed in the past. Nothing about the physiology or behaviour of deceased animals is preserved in the rocks. ADAPTADO DE: <FISHINSECTS.SUITE101.COM>. 2. According to the text: I. a primitive animal is one which has not undergone the same e volutionary process that evolved animals went through. II. lthough coelacanths and crocodiles are very similar to their fossilized ancestors, it is correct to say that they have evolved. III. the evolution of animals is determined by the chang- es in their respective habitats. IV. dinosaurs are as old as mantis shrimps. V. all living species will succeed in survi- ving forever. Está correta apenas a afirmação: a) I. b) II. c) II. d) IV. e) V. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 4 QUESTÕES Motion picture is one of the almost popular forms of art and en- tertainment throughout the world. Every week, millions of people go to the movies. Many millions more watch movies in television. In addition, TV networks use motion picture techniques to film many program that appear on television each week. Motion pictures are a major source of information as well as of entertainment. Movies can take us back into history. They can recreate the lives of great men and women. Motion pictures can introduce us to new ideas and help us explore serious social issues. Students learn from educational films in school. Industries use movies to train employees and to advertise their products. issues = questões (THE WORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA. VOL.13. CHICAGO, WORLD BOOK INC., 1988) Na(s) questão(ões) a seguir, escreva a soma dos itens corretos. 3. (UFPR) “Motion picture is one of the most popular forms of art and entertainment throughout the world.” Which expressions can replace THROUGHOUT THE WORLD in the sentence above? 01) except the world 02) although the world 04) all over the world 08) in certain parts of the world 16) in every part of the world 32) in the whole world 4. (UFPR) In which of the following sentences is the verb used correctly? 01) Does he enjoys working in films? 02) A film star is a well-known cinema actor or actress. 04) Television competes directly with the cinema. 08) It don’t take a long time to make a film. 16) Are you interested in the cinema? 32) People sometimes become emotionally involved with movie stars. 5. (UFPR) “__________ of our history and the lives of __________ of our great men and women are recreated by the movies.” Choose the alternative(s) that can complete the sen- tence above correctly. 01) Much - much 02) Much - many 04) Many - much 08) A lot - a lot 16) A lot - much 32) A lot - many 6. (UFPR) Based on the text it is correct to say that: 01) Many people go to the movies. 02) The cinema is a very popular form of art. 04) Some films deal with the lives of famous people. 08) Some TV programs are made using motio picture techniques. 16) Some industries allow their employees to go to the movies. 32) The only objective of a film is to entertain people. A.P.A. Dissertativo Responda às perguntas a seguir em português Did Charles Darwin Delay in Publishing Origins of Species? Charles Robert Darwin (1809-1882) began working on his theo- ries of the Origins of Species in 1837; however his works were pu- blished more than twenty years after that. There is much specula- tion as to why it took so long to publish the groundbreaking book; 15 the film, entitled Jean Charles. Jean Charles de Menezes was 27 years old when Metropolitan Police officers fired seven bullets into his head at Stockwell Tube station on 22 July 2005. The force was found guilty of endangering public safety in a subsequent inquiry into the incident but no individual officers have been held accoun- table for his death. The Gonzaga mayor, Eugenia-Maria Magalhães, said: “We wish the town could have become known for other reasons, if it had to be known at all. What happened still has a profound effect on all of us. There’s a lot of indignation, pain, sadness, and Jean Charles is greatly missed. He was an ordinary boy who left us in search of a better life.” The BBC commissioned the film and approached Henrique Goldman to direct and write it, but it later pulled out of the project because they didn’t agree on what perspective the film should take. “I don’t know why they pulled the plug,” said Gold- man. He managed to keep the project going when the UK Film Council provided half the funding. “The Government which lets the police get away with murder also allows us to make the film,” said Goldman. “This schizophrenic behaviour is very British.” <WWW.INDEPENDENT.CO.UK/ARTS-ENTERTAINMENT/FILMS> 5. (Unesp) De que fonte foram efetivamente obtidos re- cursos para financiar a produção do filme? Essa fonte é de caráter público ou privado? Qual a porcentagem desse apoio financeiro em relação ao total de gastos? A.P.A. Enem DISPONÍVEL EM: HTTP://WWW.CHRIS-ALEXANDER.CO.UK/1191. ACESSO EM: 28 JUL. 2010 (ADAPTADO). 1. Criadas pelos países membros da Organização das Nações Unidas e por organizações internacionais, as metas de desenvolvimento do milênio envolvem oito objetivos a serem alcançados até 2015. Apesar da diver- some suggest that he was afraid to challenge the scientific commu- nity and upset the Church. After first positing his ideas regarding how species underwenta “natural selection” and could possibly adapt over time, the text provoked adverted reactions from his in- tellectual mentors, Charles Lyell and Sir John Herschel. Still, Darwin continued working on his theory; if he really was affected by the potential of a negative response to his ideas, some believe that it seems more plausible that he would have abandoned research completely. Throughout the period during which he was working on the Origins of Species, he published essays revealing his work in progress. Many now believe that Darwin did not delay publishing, but rather, took over two decades to complete his work. ADAPTADO DE: <HTTP://WWW.SUITE101.COM/GREATTHINKERS/4>. 1. (Unicamp) Que hipótese é levantada por algumas pessoas para justificar o fato de Darwin ter demorado mais de duas décadas para publicar Origins of Species? 2. (Unicamp) Indique duas evidências que contrariam essa hipótese. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS QUESTÕES In the latest move to inflame the racially tinged issue ahead of November’s congressional they intend to call hearings on over- turning the 14th amendment to the constitution, which grants citizenship to anyone born in the US. Leading Republicans have denounced the provision as outdated, saying it encourages “invasion by birth canal” in which illegal immigrants smuggle themselves into the US to have “anchor babies”. The change is being pushed by the Republican whip in the Senate, John Kyl, and senator Lindsey Graham, who said that “birthright citizenship is a mistake”. The 14th amendment was adopted in 1868 after the civil war to block laws that prevented former slaves from becoming US citizens. Reform must be approved by two-thirds of both houses of Congress and ratified by three-quarters of US states or by calling a con- vention by the states. GUARDIAN.CO.UK. 3 AUGUST 2010. ADAPTADO. Baseando-se nas informações fornecidas pelo texto, responda às questões a seguir: 3. (Fuvest) O que a 14.ª emenda à Constituição dos Esta- dos Unidos assegura e por que ela foi adotada? 4. (Fuvest) Qual é a questão polêmica apresentada no texto com relação aos imigrantes? TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Film about de Menezes premieres in home town BY JAN ONOSZKO IN RIO DE JANEIRO FRIDAY, 19 JUNE 2009 The life story of the Brazilian man shot dead by police on a Lon- don Underground train because they believed he was a suicide bomber is celebrated in a film which premieres in his home town this evening. The population of Gonzaga is expected to double in size as 10,000 people pack the town’s football ground for the first screening of 16 sidade cultural, esses objetivos, mostrados na imagem, são comuns ao mundo todo, sendo dois deles: a) O combate à AIDS e a melhoria do ensino universitário. b) A redução da mortalidade adulta e a criação de parcerias globais. c) A promoção da igualdade de gêneros e a erradica- ção da pobreza. d) A parceria global para o desenvolvimento e a valo- rização das crianças. e) A garantia da sustentabilidade ambiental e comba- te ao trabalho infantil. 2. Os cartões-postais costumam ser utilizados por viajan- tes que desejam enviar notícias dos lugares que visitam a parentes e amigos. Publicado no site do projeto ANDRILL, o texto em formato de cartão-postal tem o propósito de: a) comunicar o endereço da nova sede do projeto nos Estados Unidos. b) convidar colecionadores de cartões-postais a se reunirem em um evento. c) anunciar uma nova coleção de selos para angariar fundos para a Antártica. d) divulgar às pessoas a possibilidade de receberem um cartão-postal da Antártica. e) solicitar que as pessoas visitem o site do menciona- do projeto com maior frequência. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO I used to rule the world Seas would rise when I gave the word Now in the morning and I sleep alone Sweep the streets I used to own I used to roll the dice Feel the fear in my enemy’s eyes Listen as the crowd would sing “Now the old king is dead! Long live the king!” One minute I held the key Next the walls were closed on me And I discovered that my castles stand Upon pillars of salt and pillars of sand […] MARTIN, C. VIVA LA VIDA, COLDPLAY. IN: VIVA LA VIDA OR DEATH AND ALL HIS FRIENDS. PARLOPHONE, 2008. 3. Letras de músicas abordam temas que, de certa for- ma, podem ser reforçados pela repetição de trechos ou palavras. O fragmento da canção Viva la vida, por exem- plo, permite conhecer o relato de alguém que: a) costumava ter o mundo aos seus pés e, de repente, se viu sem nada. b) almeja o título de rei e, por ele, tem enfren- tado inúmeros inimigos. c) causa pouco temor a seus inimigos, embora tenha muito poder. d) limpava as ruas e, com seu esforço, tornou-se rei de seu povo. e) tinha a chave para todos os castelos nos quais de- sejava morar. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO THE WEATHER MAN They say that the British love talking about the weather. For other nationalities this can be a banal and boring subject of conversa- tion, something that people talk about when they have nothing else to say to each other. And yet the weather is a very important part of our lives. That at least is the opinion of Barry Gromett, press officer for The Met Office. This is located in Exeter, a pretty cathe- dral city in the southwest of England. Here employees — and computers — supply weather forecasts for much of the world. SPEAK UP. ANO XXIII, Nº 275. 4. Ao conversar sobre a previsão do tempo, o texto mostra: a) o aborrecimento do cidadão britânico ao falar so- bre banalidades. b) a falta de ter o que falar em situações de avaliação de línguas. c) a importância de se entender sobre meteorologia para falar inglês. d) as diferenças e as particularidades culturais no uso de uma língua. e) o conflito entre diferentes ideias e opiniões ao se comunicar em inglês. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO 17 5. Ao optar por ler a reportagem completa sobre o as- sunto anunciado, tem-se acesso a duas palavras que Bill Gates não quer que o leitor conheça e que se referem: a) aos responsáveis pela divulgação desta in- forma- ção na internet. b) às marcas mais importantes de microcompu- tado- res do mercado. c) aos nomes dos americanos que inventaram a su- posta tecnologia. d) aos sites da internet pelos quais o produto já pode ser conhecido. e) às empresas que levam vantagem para serem suas concorrentes. Gabarito Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A) 1. E 2. A 3. B 4. A 5. B 6. C 7. B 8. B 9. C A.P.A. Fixação 1. C 2. D 3. E 4. E 5. A 6. D 7. B A.P.A. Complementar 1. 02 + 04 = 06 2. B 3. 04 + 16 + 32 = 52 4. 02 + 04 + 16 + 32 = 54 5. 02 + 08 + 32 = 42 6. 01 + 02 + 04 + 08 = 15 A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. Especula-se que o atraso para a publicação de A origem das espécies tenha ocorrido devido ao temor que Darwin teria de desafiar a comunidade científica, além de temer reações adversas entre os eclesiásticos. 2. A hipótese mencionada anteriormente pode ser contra- riada pelo fato de que ele continuou publicando papers sobre a evolução de seu trabalho, mesmo após sua divul- gação inicial. Se ele realmente estivesse preocupado com reações negativas, ele teria interrompido completamente sua pesquisa, algo que de fato nunca aconteceu. 3. A 14.ª emenda à constituição dos Estados Unidos da América assegura cidadania estadunidense a qualquer pessoa nascida em seu território. Essa emenda foi adotada para evitar a adoção de leis que impedissem antigos escra- vos de se tornarem cidadãos daquele país. 4. A 14.ª emenda está sendo utilizada para burlar as leis de imigração dos EUA. Casais entram ilegalmente no país para terem bebês que terão assim a cidadania estaduni- dense e servirão como uma espécie de “âncora” que os manteria legalmente nos EUA. 5. A princípio, os recursos foram fornecidos pela BBC, que porteriormente retirou-se do projeto. Efetivamente, metade do dinheiro para o filme foi obtido com o UK Film Cou- ncil (Conselho Britânico de Cinema, em tradução livre), que é uma fonte pública, conformeevidenciado pela fala de Goldman “The government that lets the police... also allows us to make the film.” (O mesmo governo que per- mite que a polícia... nos permite fazer o filme.) A.P.A. Enem 1. C 2. D 3. A 4. D 5. E 18 1. Introdução Em linhas gerais, a forma que o vestibulando aborda as provas não é a mais apropriada. Foca-se muito na leitura do texto, o que compromete não a nota final, mas o tempo investido para se alcançar uma boa pontuação. Ao priorizar a leitura (e a tradução, muitas vezes, desnecessária) do tex- to, o vestibulando pode até obter a nota desejada, mas a consequência geralmente é um desperdício de tempo muito grande, o que tende a ser desastroso. Para evitar essa “catástrofe”, propõe-se aqui uma aborda- gem mais adequada e objetiva. As etapas que são sugeri- das a seguir compõem parte do ensino de linguagem que é conhecido como leitura instrumental. 1st step: verifique o(s) título(s), a fonte e as imagens as- sociadas ao texto. Ao pinçar essas informações, você estará se preparando para a leitura do mesmo. 2nd step: leia de forma atenta os enunciados e as alternati- vas (quando houver) relacionadas ao texto; dessa forma, você estará, ao mesmo tempo, captando informações sobre ele e se preparando para procurar apenas o que lhe for perguntado. 3rd step: faça uma leitura superficial do texto (skimming), não se afligindo com as palavras desconhecidas e com in- formações muito específicas. Essa primeira leitura destina-se apenas a tomar contato com o sentido mais geral do texto. 4th step: a partir da informação solicitada pelo enunciado das perguntas, é possível verificar a qual trecho do texto aquela questão se refere. 5th step: ao ler qualquer excerto de um texto, tente focar apenas nas palavras que você conhece ou naquelas de que você seja capaz de deduzir o significado. É verdade que, ao ignorar as palavras desconhecidas, é possível que sua com- preensão de algumas informações do texto fique compro- metida, mas uma notável quantidade delas será assimilada. Pratique com o texto a seguir. (FUVEST – Adaptado) 12 Steps for E-Mail Addicts I used to think I could quit checking my e-mail any time I wanted to, but I stopped kidding myself years ago. My e-mail program is up and running 24 hours a day, and once I submit to its siren call, whole hours can go missing. I have a friend who recently found herself stuck on a cruise ship near Panama that didn’t offer e-mail, so she chartered a helicopter to take her to the nearest Internet cafe. There was nothing in her queue but junk mail and other spam, but she thought the trip was worth it. I know how she felt. You never know when you’re going to get that note from Uncle Eric about your inheritance. Or that White House din- ner invitation with a time-sensitive R.S.V.P. WWW.TIME.COM 1. A passagem nos conta que o escritor a) acredita que já passou da hora para ele parar de pensar que pode, a qualquer momento, interromper seu hábito de ler e-mails. b) está totalmente ciente de que é um verificador compulsivo de e-mail. c) costumava pensar que apenas garotos desperdiça- vam horas inteiras verificando suas mensagens. d) não achava que seriam necessários anos para se livrar do seu “vício” de ler e-mails. e) acredita que se conseguir ficar 24 horas sem ler qualquer e-mail, ele vai definitivamente se livrar desse hábito. 2. Escolha a correta tradução para “...whole hours can go missing” a) não sinto falta das horas perdidas. b) vale a pena desperdiçar várias horas. c) sou capaz de perder horas inteiras. d) posso perder totalmente a noção das horas. e) não me importo em ficar até altas horas. 3. De acordo com a informação do texto, o que a amiga do escritor descobriu quando ela finalmente conseguiu checar seus e-mails? a) Mensagens desimportantes b) Uma mensagem do próprio escritor. DO YOU UNDERSTAND (TEXT INTERPRETATION) HABILIDADES: 3, 6, 8 e 15 COMPETÊNCIAS: 1, 2, e 5 CLASS 2 19 c) Um convite para o jantar d) Nenhuma mensagem e) Uma mensagem de seu tio. Ao seguir as instruções propostas antes desse texto, seria possível inferir que se trata de um texto informativo/jorna- lístico, por ter sido retirado do website da reviste Time. A ilustração sugere que se trata de uma pessoa compulsiva pela leitura de mensagens, ideia reforçada pelo título (12 dicas para viciados em e-mail) . A concepção inicial seria confirmada pelas informações apre- sentadas nos enunciados e nas alternativas (mesmo que exis- tam mais alternativas erradas do que corretas). Em seguida, o vestibulando poderia focar na questão número 2, por ser necessária apenas a informação contida na própria questão. A questão 1 baseia-se no primeiro trecho do texto. Sabe-se disso porque o autor abre o texto em primeira pessoa (I used to think I…). Já a questão 3 é respondida pelo trecho no qual a amiga do escritor é apresentada (I have a friend…) Em uma resolução mais “convencional”, o vestibulando teria inevitavelmente lido o texto algumas vezes, o que resultaria em perda de tempo e poderia gerar confusão de raciocínio porque há muitas informações que não são fundamentais para a resolução das questões propostas. Em contrapartida, se você se dedicar a responder às perguntas propostas, os resultados aparecerão mais rápida e claramente. Uma das dificuldades da interpretação é perceber os falsos cognatos, palavras que, na sua forma original em inglês, podem causar traduções incorretas por causa da seme- lhança com algum vocábulo do português. Em alguns ves- tibulares, a solução de uma questão pode estar diretamen- te conectada ao conhecimento do falso cognato e a sua devida compreensão. FONTE: YOUTUBE Validation - Curta metragem F Y multimídia: vídeo 2. Alguns falsos cognatos importantes actual (real, verdadeiro) actually (na verdade, na realidade, o fato é que) admiral (almirante) alias (pseudônimo, nome falso) amass (acumular, juntar) anthem (hino) appoint (nomear, indicar) argument (discussão, debate) beef (carne bovina) braces (aparelho dental) collar (gola) college (faculdade) commodity (mercadoria) comprehensive (abrangente, extenso, amplo) compromise (entrar em acordo, fazer concessão, acordo) condom (preservativo) convict (condenado) corporate (cabo na hierarquia militar) costume (fantasia) deception (fraude, falsificação) devolve (transferir) diversion (desvio) eventually (finalmente, por fim) exit (saída, sair) fabric (tecido) grip (agarrar algo firmemente) hospice (clínica para pacientes terminais) idiom (expressão idiomática) ingenious (engenhoso) inhabitable (habitável) injury (ferimento) interest (juros) FONTE: YOUTUBE Falsos cognatos em inglês F Y multimídia: vídeo 20 New Delhi -metallo-beta-lactamase is a bacterial enzyme that poses a serious threat to people. It grants its host re- sistance to carbapenems and other beta-lactam antibiotics used by doctors around the world as a last line of defence against stubborn infections. And, as if that were not bad enough, it also confers protection against sunlight. This second protection matters because, in many places, the idea that sunlight is the best disinfectant is no mere metaphor. Part of the treatment of sewage water in sunny climes is often to leave it out in the sun, permitting ultravio- let light to inflict damage to the complex molecules, such as DNA, that sustain bacterial life. Bacteria that survived such assault would be available to cause disease, or to pass their genes on to others that do so. And, in 2015, one such was found in a treatment plant in Saudi Arabia. This was a strain of E. coli (a common bug that lives, usually harmlessly, in human guts) that was, in- deed, in possession of New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase. Peiying Hong at the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, in Thuwal, has been working on this bug since its discovery and thinks she may have come up with a way to deal with its resistance to sunlight.As she reports in Environmental Science and Technology, she and her col- leagues have found that phages (viruses which infect bac- teria) sabotage this resistance. Dr Hong knew from her earlier work that sunlight promotes the activity of some of the bug’s genes and suppresses that of others — a process she suspects is mediated by New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase. In particular, the promoted genes relate to cell-wall synthesis, DNA repair and the production of compounds that mop up harmful oxidis- ing agents produced by sunlight. The suppressed genes (downregulated presumably to avoid competition within a bacterial cell for scarce metabolic resources needed for more immediate tasks) include many related to fending off phages. She therefore speculated that letting phages loose on these now-undefended bacteria might kill them. She and her colleagues collected naturally occurring phag- es from Saudi wastewater plants. They found seven types which, when unleashed on the photoresistant strain of E. coli, readily destroyed it. Three of the seven, moreover, looked particularly suitable for development as weapons against this strain. When offered various bacteria as potential prey, they attacked only it. And they were also tolerant of sunlight. Experiment proved this notion correct. When suspensions of the three phages in question were mixed together as a cocktail and added to a suspension of photoresistant E. coli, the bacteria began to decay within two hours. In phage-free suspensions, by contrast, they held out for more than four hours. lecture (palestra, aula) library (biblioteca) lunch (almoço) mayor (prefeito) novel (romance escrito) office (escritório) parents (pais) phony (trapaceiro, mau caráter) prejudice (preconceito) preservative (conservante) private (recruta) push (empurrar) realize (perceber) requirement (requisito) retired (aposentado) retribution (represália, punição) scholar (erudito) sensible (sensato) service (atendimento) support (apoiar, apoio) tax (imposto) tenant (inquilino) FONTE: YOUTUBE Falsos cognatos F Y multimídia: vídeo 3. Medicine A novel way to stop the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria Expose them to sunlight and mix in viruses HTTPS://WWW.ECONOMIST.COM/SCIENCE-AND-TECHNOLOGY/2018/12/01/A- NOVEL-WAY-TO-STOP-THE-SPREAD-OF-ANTIBIOTIC-RESISTANT-BACTERIA. 21 Docomo with great fanfare back in 2004, when the technology first became available in Japan, but so far it’s been a dud – fewer than one in five owners of a mobile wallet handset has ever used it to pay for anything. Mobile wallets are accepted at too few places, say experts. That’s now changing quickly, however. New services are rolling out so fast, 2007 is emerging as the year of the mobile wallet in Japan. The biggest reason is the rapid expansion of e-money services accessible by mobile: 7-Eleven, the country’s dominant conve- nience chain, has just launched its own brand of e-money, and leading chain AEON will follow suit later this year. The mobile Suica service provides one of the biggest incentives for users to go mobile. The Suica fare card, introduced in 2001, now has more than 20 million users. NEWSWEEK. JULY 9, 2007 1. (Fatec) De acordo com o texto, Daisuke Tanaka: a) trabalha para a companhia de metrô. b) tem desconto nos bilhetes de trem. c) não utiliza frequentemente trem, metrô e táxi. d) trocou uma carteira por um celular. e) pode pagar seus bilhetes de trem através de seu celular. 2. (Fatec) Segundo o texto, a “mobile wallet”: a) está fazendo muito sucesso desde 2004. b) é também um telefone celular. c) é aceita em diversos estabelecimentos no Japão. d) foi lançada pela rede 7-Eleven. e) tem sido utilizada por um grande número de japoneses. 3. (Fatec) De acordo com o texto, 7-Eleven, Suica e AEON: a) São empresas japonesas que fornecem supri- men- tos para o metrô de Tókio. b) São empresas que já oferecem ou oferecerão os seus cartões de “dinheiro eletrônico”. c) São empresas para quem Daisuke Tanaka trabalha. d) São nomes de lojas de conveniência no Japão. e) São empresas que colaborarão com a NTT Do- como do Japão. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 3 QUESTÕES (Unesp) I started to run because I felt desperately unfit. But the biggest pay-off for me was – and still is – the deep relaxation that I achieve by taking exercise. It tires me out but I find that it does calm me down. When I started running seven years ago, I could mana- ge only 400 meters before I had to stop. Breathless and aching, I walked the next quarter of a mile, alternating these two activities for a couple of kilometers. When I started to jog I never dreamt of running in a marathon, but a few years later I realized that if I trai- ned for it, the London Marathon, one of the biggest British sporting events, would be within my reach. My story shows that an unfit 39- year old, as I was when I started running, who had taken no serious exercise for twenty years, can do the marathon – and that this is a sport in which women can beat men. But is it crazy to do it? Does it make sense to run in the expectation of becoming healthier? My advice is: if you are under forty, healthy and feel well, you can begin as I did by jog-ging gently until you are out of breath, then wa- Using phages to attack bacteria in wastewater plants is not a new idea. There is a long history of their being employed to breach the otherwise-impenetrable biofilms that many species form on bits of equipment used in such plants. Dr Hong’s approach, though, is completely novel—and may be of particular value in Saudi Arabia. In such a desert country, water is a precious commodity while sunlight is abundant and free. Wastewater facilities there are already under pressure to release treated water for agricultural and even domestic use. Making sure bugs of this sort are dead before such water is used is of the utmost importance. Us- ing other, even smaller, bugs to do it has elegance. Vocabulary: grant: conceder host: hospedeiro stubborn: teimoso phage: forma reduzida da palavra "bacteriophage", bac- teriófago (que come bactérias) breach: quebra; violação; ruptura utmost: máximo; extremo Phrasal Verb: mop up: absorver FONTE: YOUTUBE http://www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/ F Y multimídia: site Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 3 QUESTÕES BEAMS OF MONEY DAISUKE TANAKA’s daily commute has gotten a lot simpler in recent weeks now that he can pay for all his train tickets with his mobile phone. To travel Tokyo’s trains, subways and even some taxis, all he needs to do is to waive his mobile near the now standard card reader. He has also downloaded software for se- veral prepaid and credit cards, turning his mobile phone into a replacement for his wallet. “I haven’t touched my wallet at all today,” he said one recent evening. The mobile wallet was an- nounced by NTT. 22 lking, and alternating the two for about three kilometers. Build up the jogging in stages until you can do the whole distance comfortably. HEADWAY INTERMEDIATE – STUDENT’S BOOK. OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS. ADAPTADO. 4. (Unesp) Assinale a alternativa correta: a) A autora do texto se considera uma pessoa rela- xada e indiferente em relação à prática de esportes. b) O texto apresenta o depoimento de uma corredora que iniciou sua prática nesse esporte porque se sentia fora de forma. c) A autora do texto se exercitou seriamente durante vin- te anos para poder participar da maratona de Londres. d) O texto apresenta argumentos contrários à práti- ca da corrida por pessoas na faixa etária acima dos quarenta anos. e) De acordo com o texto, a prática de exercícios por vinte anos causa, especialmente nas mulheres, dores crônicas e falta de ar. 5. (Unesp) De acordo com o texto: a) a autora começou a praticar corrida aos sete anos de idade e nessa época conseguia percorrer 400 metros. b) pessoas na faixa etária de quarenta anosestão geralmente fora de forma para a prática da corrida. c) a autora começou a praticar corrida porque sempre sonhou em correr na maratona de Londres. d) pessoas abaixo de quarenta anos conseguem ini- ciar a prática da corrida alternando etapas de corrida e de caminhada. e) corredores na faixa etária de quarenta anos geralmen- te sentem falta de ar nos primeiros estágios da corrida. 6. (Unesp) No texto, as expressões pay-off (1º parágrafo), a couple of (2º parágrafo), my reach (2º parágrafo) e beco- ming healthier (2º parágrafo) significam, respectivamente: a) sem pagamento, alguns, minha riqueza, e tornar-se saudável. b) pagamento, uma dupla de, meu objetivo e tornar-se saudável. c) corte no pagamento, uma dupla de, minha riqueza e ficar doente. d) desafio, um casal de, meu objetivo e tornar-se saudável. e) recompensa, alguns, meu alcance e tornar-se saudável. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 2 QUESTÕES Dawn of the pre-tiree: What to call the time of life between work and old age? To get the most out of longer lives, another age category is needed What do you call someone who is over 65 but not yet elderly? This stage of life, between work and decrepitude, lacks a name. “Geriactives” errs too much on the side of senescence1. “Night- cappers” risks being patronising. Perhaps “Nyppies” (Not Yet Past It) or “Owls” (Older, Working Less, Still earning) ring truer. Branding an age category might sound like a frivolous exercise. But life stages are primarily social constructs, and history shows that their emergence can trigger deep changes in attitudes. Before 1800 no country in the world had an average life expec- tancy at birth beyond 40. Today there is not a country that does not. Since 1900, more years have been added to human life than in the rest of history combined, initially by reducing child mortality and lately by stretching lifespans. Longevity is one of humanity’s great accomplishments. Yet it is seen as one of society’s great headaches. The problem lies in the increasing dependency of the old on the young. As the world greys, growth, tax revenues and workforces will decline while spending on pensions and health care will increase. So, at least, goes the orthodoxy. Doom-mongers2 tend to miss a bigger point, however. Those extra years of life are predominantly healthy ones. Too many governments and firms fail to recognize this fact. A more radical approach would start by acknowledging that, in the rich world at least, many of the old are still young and active. They want to work, but more flexibly. They want to spend money, too. Declaring a new stage of life could help change perceptions. It has done so before. Today’s conception of childhood emerged in the 19th century, paving the way for child-protection laws and a golden age of children’s literature. Spotty, awkward 15-year-olds predated the 1940s, but only then did mystified adults coin the label “teenagers”, fuelling all sorts of products and services, from bobby socks to the music industry. In 1944 Life wrote that “American businessmen, many of whom have teen-age daughters, have only recently begun to realise that teen-agers make up a big and special market.” So, as life becomes longer, the word “retirement”, which literally means withdrawal to a place of seclusion, has become misleading. At 65 you are not clapped out, but pretired. (WWW.ECONOMIST.COM, 06.07.2017. ADAPTADO.) 1 Senescence: the condition or process of deterioration with age. 2 Doom-monger: a person who predicts disaster. 7. The article puts forward the idea that a) stretched lifespans have generated increasingly ex- tra undesirable public spendings worldwide. b) a new age group should be created if we are to maximize the potential benefits of people´s greater longevity today. c) the broader the number of people reaching more advanced ages, the greater the need for public health care programs. d) new governmental decisions on pensions are impe- rative if we are to adequately care for the elder. 23 4. ( ) countries that are monitored by the United Na- tions follow the Kyoto Protocol strictly. 5. ( ) terrible consequences are foreseen if global war- ming isn’t controlled. Baseado nas informações do texto abaixo, marque (C) ou errado (E) para as afirmações de 6 a 10. Six months ago, Malala Yousafzai was lying in a hospital bed, recovering from a Taliban attack in which she was shot in the head and neck. The shooting was intended to si-len- ce the Pakistani teenager who had defied the Taliban’s ban against girls in school. But it had the opposite effect: Ins- tead of silencing the 15-year old, the attack only made her voice more powerful. Malala’s story has raised global awareness of girls’ education. And now that she’s out of the hospital and back in school, she is determined to keep fighting for equality. “God has given me this new life,” she said in February, her first public statement since the shooting. “I want to serve the people. I want every girl, every child, to be educated.” Worldwide, there are 66 million girls out of school, according to UNESCO – many more than boys, who don’t have to face the same discrimination and obstacles that girls do in some countries. Malala was critically injured in the attack, but she suffered no permanent brain injuries. She underwent several success- ful surgeries in Pakistan and the United Kingdom, where she now lives after her father was given a job with the Pakistani Consulate. In March, she went back to school for the first time since the attack, attending an all-girls high school in Birmin- gham, England. And while she recovers from her injuries, she is continuing to raise awareness and money for education. Last month, she announced a $45,000 grant to a fund that was set up in her name – and the first to benefit will be girls from the Swat Valley. BY KYLE ALMOND, CNN JUNE 17, 2013 – UPDATED 1346 GMT (2146 HKT) ADAPTED FROM: <HTTP://EDITION.CNN.COM/2013/04/30/ WORLD/ MALALA-GIRLS-EDUCATION/INDEX.HTML> ACCESSED ON: JULY 18TH, 2013. 6 a 10. (UFSC) Select the CORRECT proposition(s). Text gives information about: 6. ( ) the number of girls who are out of school all over the world. 7. ( ) Malala’s current age and health state. 8. ( ) the amount of money Malala’s father receives from the government. 9. ( ) the reason why Pakistani girls cannot attend school. 10. ( ) Malala’s plans for the future. e) the creation of new words to refer to people over 65 may contribute to the acceptance of older people by society. 8. Assinale a alternativa cuja afirmação corresponde, de forma mais próxima, ao conteúdo da ilustração que introduz o texto. a) “Retirement” literally means withdrawal to a place of seclusion. b) Extra years of life are predominantly healthy ones. c) The word “retirement” has become misleading. d) In the rich world, many of the old are still young and active. e) Years have been added to human life by stretching lifespans. A.P.A. Fixação Baseado nas informações do texto abaixo, marque (C) ou errado (E) para as afirmações de 1 a 5. THE WORST OF BOTH WORLDS? In the global-warming debate, there’s a big gap between public rhetoric (which verges on hysteria) and public behavior (which indica-tes indifference). People say they’re worried but don’t act that way. Greenhouse emissions continue to rise despite many earnest pled-ges to control them. Just last week, the Uni-ted Na- tions reported that of the 41 countries it monitors (not including most developing nations), 34 had increased greenhouse emis- -sions from 2000 to 2004. These include most countries commit- ted to reducing emissions under the Kyoto Protocol. Why is this? Here are three reasons. First: With today’s technologies, we don’t know how to cut gree- nhouse gases in politically and economically acceptable ways. Second: In rich democracies, policies that might curb greenhou- se gases require politicians and the public to act in exceptio- nally“enlightened” (read: “unrealistic”) ways. Third: Even if rich countries cut emissions, it won’t make much difference unless poor countries do likewise - and so far, they’ve refused because that might jeopardize their economic growth and po- verty-reduction efforts. Unless we develop cost-effective technologies that break the link between carbondioxide emissions and energy use, we can’t do much. Anyone serious about global warming must focus on technology - and not just assume it. Otherwise, our practical choices are all bad: costly mandates and controls that harm the economy; or costly mandates and controls that barely affect greenhouse gases. Or, possibly, both. ADAPTED FROM: THE WORST OF BOTH WORLDS?. NEWSWEEK NOVEMBER 13, 2006, PAGE 45. 1 a 5. (UFPE) In accordance to the text, in the glwarming debate, it is noticed that: 1. ( ) there have been no agreements to control gree- nhouse emissions at all. 2. ( ) public rhetoric and public behavior di- verge. 3. ( ) most countries that are committed to reducing emissions don’t do so. 24 A.P.A. Complementar TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 10 QUESTÕES The New York Times on the web The Rush to Enhancement: Medicine Isn’t Just for the Sick Anymore BY SHERWIN B. NULAND Until the mid-1960s, medical research was primarily driven by the desire to solve the problems of sick people. Although Aristotle was what might be termed today a pure laboratory investigator, with no thought of the clinical usefulness of his findings, the vast majority of those physicians later influenced by his contributions to biology were trying to solve the mysteries of human anatomy and physio- logy for the distinct purpose of combating sickness. The discovery of blood circulation in the 17th century, the elucidation of the ana- tomical effects of disease in the 18th, the introduction of antisepsis and anesthesia in the 19th, the development of antibiotics and cardiac and transplant surgery in the 20th- all of these were the direct results of physicians and others having recognized a specific group of challenges that stood in the way of making sick people better. Armed with knowledge of the disease processes, they ente- red their laboratories to address specific clinical issues. Their goal was improving the lot of actual patients, often their own. The rise of molecular biology since the late 1950s has had the gradual and quite unforeseen effect of turning the eyes of medical scientists increasingly toward the basic mechanisms of life, rather than disease and death. Of course, this has always been the orien- tation of all non-medical biologists, studying growth, reproduction, nutrition or any of the other characteristics shared by all living things. But now the boundaries have become blurred, between research that will alter the approach to disease and research that will alter the approach to life itself. While until very recently the bedside usually determined what was done in the medical research labo- ratory, the findings coming out of the laboratory nowadays are just as likely to tell the clinician what he can do at the bedside. The tail often wags the dog. In fact, the tail is becoming the dog. ADAPTADO. ENCONTRA-SE NA ÍNTEGRA EM <HTTP://NYTIMES. COM/ LIBRARY/REVIEW/051098MEDICINE-REVIEW.HTML> 1. (Unifesp) A palavra “although” na frase do primei- ro parágrafo, “Although Aristotle was what might be termed today a pure laboratory investigator...”, indica uma ideia de: a) alternância. b) exemplificação. c) oposição. d) condição. e) enumeração 2. (Unifesp) Na frase do segundo parágrafo, “... turning the eyes of medical scientists incre-asingly toward the basic mechanisms of life, rather than disease and de- ath.”, a expressão “rather than” pode ser substituída, sem mudar o sentido, por: a) even if. b) in order to. c) moreover. d) furthermore e) instead of. 3. (Unifesp) One of the recent medical develo- pments of last century was: a) transplant surgery. b) cardiac blood circulation control. c) antisepsis. d) anesthesia. e) human molecule anatomy. 4. (Unifesp) Atualmente, os dois tipos de pesquisa médica: a) determinam as doenças que serão pesquisa- das mais intensamente. b) realizam testes em animais de laboratório, princi- palmente em cães. c) interferem no diagnóstico clínico de pacien- tes em leitos de hospitais. d) fazem testes laboratoriais com seres huma- nos acamados. e) não apresentam uma diferenciação clara. 5. (Unifesp) O texto, como um todo: a) apresenta uma evolução cronologicamente inversa das descobertas médicas. b) exemplifica historicamente a ideia de que o interes- se da medicina oscila pendularmente a cada século. c) defende o avanço da tecnologia, como no caso dos transplantes. d) compara a visão das pesquisas médicas do passa- do com a do presente. e) afirma que as descobertas atuais são inconsistentes, na medida em que não se concentram na cura de doenças. 6. (Unifesp) The focus of medical research until the mid 60s was to: a) investigate purely the causes of illnesses in lab- oratories. b) discover the mysteries of the human body. c) solve the problems of sick people. d) discover physiological enigmas. e) elucidate the anatomical efects of blood circulation. 7. (Unifesp) From the late 1950s on, medical scientists started increasingly to focus on: a) disease and death. b) basic mechanisms of life. c) all living things. d) molecules and chemistry. e) reproduction and genetics. 8. (Unifesp) Há pouco tempo, as pesquisas médicas: a) eram determinadas pela prática clínica. b) tendiam a definir os procedimentos clínicos e cirúr- gicos adotados. c) alteravam a visão médica da vida em si. d) tratavam da doença como um processo natural do mecanismo da vida. 25 e) percebiam a vida, a doença e a morte como campo de estudo da biologia. 9. (Unifesp) Na frase do segundo parágrafo, “Of course, this has always been the orientation of all non-medical biologists...”, a palavra “this” refere-se a: a) research in molecular biology. b) gradual and unforeseen effect. c) medical scientists. d) study of basic mechanisms of life. e) study of disease and death. 10. (Unifesp) Na última frase do primeiro parágrafo, “Their goal was improving the lot of actual patients, often their own.”, a palavra “their”, que ocorre duas vezes, refere-se: a) aos médicos e outros. b) às pessoas doentes. c) aos físicos e biólogos. d) aos próprios pacientes. e) ao conhecimento dos processos da doença. A.P.A. Dissertativo Getting Enough Sleep? BY EMILY SOHN One of the greatest things about growing older is that you get to stay up later. And it’s not just your parents who make that de- cision. Your body gives you permission to enjoy the darker hours too. Recent research has shown that brain changes during teen years make it easier for kids to stay up late. But just because you can stay up late, it doesn’t mean you should, scientists say. Young people who don’t get enough sleep are often late for school, or they miss it completely, says a recent study by the National Sleep Foundation (NSF). Sleepy kids also tend to be bad tempered and unhappy. And their grades suffer. Our sleep-wake schedules may seem to be ruled by the need to get to school or work on time, but they’re really under the control of our body’s internal clock. Every mammal has a “master clock” in its brain that tells its body what time it is and when it needs to sleep. Scientists recently discovered cells in the brain that collect information about light directly from the eyes. When light comes in, our internal clock thinks that it’s daytime. Then, as darkness arrives, the body secretes a chemical called melatonin, which tells the clockthat it’s nighttime. As we approach our teen years, melatonin secretion comes at a later time. That’s why children who usually go to bed at 8:30 or 9 p.m. all of a sudden start having trouble falling asleep. ADAPTADO DE SCIENCE NEWS FOR KIDS. 1. (Unicamp) O que acontece,segundo o texto, com jo- vens que costumam dormir menos do que o necessário? 2. (Unicamp) Para o que serve o nosso relógio interno? 3. (Unicamp) Nosso corpo produz uma substância quí- mica denominada melatonina. Qual é a função dessa substância e como ela nos afeta quando nos aproxima- mos da adolescência? TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 2 QUESTÕES Leia o seguinte texto e responda, em português, ao que se pede. Yahoo! wants to reinvent the postage stamp to cut spam. Rese- archers are testing a scheme where users pay a cent to charity for each email they send – so clearing their inbox and conscience si- multaneously. Yahoo! Research’s CentMail resurrects an old idea: that levying a charge on every e-mail sent would instantly make spamming uneconomic. But because the cent paid for an accre- dited “stamp” to appear on each email goes to charity, Cent- Mail’s inventors think it will be more successful than previous approaches to make e-mail cost. They think the cost to users is offset by the good feeling of giving to charity. <HTTP://WWW.NEWSCIENTIST.COM/ARTICLE/DN17577>. ACESSADO EM 14/08/2009. ADAPTADO. 4. (Fuvest) O texto apresenta uma proposta feita pela em- presa Yahoo! para diminuir a quantidade de mensagens eletrônicas indesejadas ou spams. Qual é a proposta? 5. (Fuvest) Por que os inventores do CentMail acredi- tam que sua proposta será mais bem sucedida que as anteriores? Gabarito Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. E 2. B 3. B 4. B 5. D 6. E 7. B 8. D A.P.A. Fixação 1. F 2. V 3. V 4. F 5. V 6. V 7. V 8. F 9. V 10. V A.P.A. Complementar 1. C 2. E 3. A 4. E 5. D 6. C 7. B 8. A 9. D 10. A A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. Segundo o texto, jovens que dormem menos do que o necessário frequentemente se atrasam para as aulas ou 26 as perdem por completo. Além disso, os jovens têm a ten- dência a apresentarem mau humor, serem infelizes e a não obterem boas notas escolares. 2. Segundo o texto, nosso relógio interno informa ao corpo que horas são e também quando precisamos dormir. 3. A melatonina é uma substância que regula nosso relógio interno, avisando-o quando o período noturno chega. Quando nos aproximamos da adolescência, a secreção da melatonina acontece mais tarde do que o habitual, o que faz com que os adolescentes tenham problemas para adormecer. 4. A proposta do Yahoo! sugere que se cobre de seus usu- ários um centavo para cada mensagem enviada. 5. Segundo o texto, o sucesso dessa iniciativa ocorreria porque todo o dinheiro arrecadado seria direcionado para instituições de caridade. 27 As aulas que abordarão gramática foram compostas le- vando em consideracão as principais dificuldades e fa- cilidades do vestibulando no Brasil. Apenas como dica, tente ver essa abordagem como instrumento facilitador do seu aprendizado. 1. Personal pronouns SUBJECT PRONOUNS OBJECT PRONOUNS I me you you he him she her it it we us you you they them Os personal pronouns da língua inglesa podem, com al- gumas variacões, ser relacionados aos pronomes pesso- ais da língua portuguesa. O que o português chama de pronomes pessoais do caso reto, a língua inglesa chama de subject pronouns, e os pronomes oblíquos são análo- gos aos object pronouns. Observe alguns usos dos subject pronouns: I am Brazilian – Eu sou brasileiro You are Brazilian – Você(s) é(são) brasileiro(s) He is Brazilian – Ele é brasileiro She is Brazilian – Ela é brasileira It is Brazilian – Isso/Essa coisa é brasileira We are Brazilian – Nós somos brasileiros They are Brazilian – Elas/Eles são brasileiros(as) Em linhas gerais, a função dessa classe de pronomes nas duas linguagens é similar: entram no lugar de substanti- vos para que não seja necessária a repetição da mesma palavra. É comum a necessidade de se repetir o mesmo substantivo num texto, por isso ele é substituído por um pronome. No entanto, é preciso que fique claro a que o pronome usado se refere. Exemplos: Kate loves Brian. She loves Brian. O exemplo acima faz a substituição do substantivo próprio "Kate" pelo pronome She. Observe o exemplo a seguir Brian loves Kate. Brian loves her. A diferença entre eles é que, no exemplo 1, "Kate" tem função de sujeito e foi substituído por um pronome de su- jeito (She). Já no exemplo 2, "Kate" tem função de objeto e foi substituído por um pronome de objeto (her). Veja mais exemplos: Brazilians agree with you. We agree with you. They agree with other Brazilians. They agree with them. The police officer will adress the issue She/He will adress the issue. Observe alguns casos nos quais há grande semelhança en- tre o uso dos pronomes em língua inglesa e em língua por- tuguesa. I, he, she e we não costumam apresentar grandes problemas para compreensão. Entretanto, é possível observar alguns problemas quan- do os significados dos seguintes pronomes são traduzi- dos para o português. You – você, vocês They – Eles, elas It – refere-se a coisas, objetos, animais (sempre no singular) e fenômenos da natureza. Ex. chuva, dia, noite, etc. WHO IS WHO? HABILIDADES: 4, 5, 6, 7, 21, 22 e 26 COMPETÊNCIAS: 5, 7 e 8 CLASS 3 28 O pronome you pode ser utilizado tanto no singular (você) quanto no plural (vocês), e seus usos podem ser diferencia- dos somente dentro do contexto apresentado. Exemplos: You are here. (você está aqui) ou (vocês estão aqui) O pronome they, assim como you, pode ter algumas inter- pretações, dependendo do contexto. They live here. (elas moram aqui) ou (eles moram aqui) Há ainda outra possibilidade: a de que o pronome they refi- ra-se a um grupo formado por mulheres e homens. Em por- tuguês a norma culta ainda dita que um grupo misto seja tratado, no todo, por pronomes masculinos. Sendo assim, o pronome they é traduzido como "eles" neste caso. Há tam- bém a possibilidade de se traduzir como “eles e elas". They live here. (eles e elas moram aqui) O caso do pronome it é mais complexo. Ele tem a função de substituir, quando no singular, coisas, animais, objetos inanimados, sentimentos, planetas, etc. Exemplos: The city of São Paulo is located in Brazil. It is located in Brazil. (A cidade de São Paulo é localizada no Brasil.) Pour the liquid in that jar. Pour the liquid in it. (Coloque o líquido naquela jarra/nela.) 2. Possessive pronouns POSSESSIVE DETERMINER POSSESSIVE PRONOUN MY MINE YOUR YOURS HIS HIS HER HERS ITS ITS OUR OURS YOUR YOURS THEIR THEIRS Os pronomes desse tópico, como o próprio nome supõe, in- troduzem uma relação de posse com um substantivo e são bastante semelhantes aos encontrados na língua portuguesa. Mas aqui podem ocorrer alguns problemas. Se, por um lado, o português apresenta marcação quádrupla de pronomes (Eu – meu, minha, meus, minhas), o inglês apre senta uma única marcação simples (somente uma forma para gênero e número). O inglês tem, no entanto, dois tipos de possessivos (Determiners e Pronouns), que podem ser entendidos como Pronomes Possessivos Adjetivos e Pronomes Possessivos Substantivos, respectivamente. Veja os exemplos a seguir: Exemplos: It is late (É tarde) It rains a lot in London (Chove muito em Londres) 3. Algumas exceções: - Animais, quando se sabe o seu sexo, podem ser referidos como he/she. Bebês ainda em gestação podem ser referidos pelo pronome it. - Barcos (e, às vezes, meios de tranporte grandes, como ônibus, trens, etc.) podem ser referidos como she. Exemplos: Your dog is fantastic. She/He is fantastic. Sarah went to the doctor and it is already 4 inches. (Sarah foi à médica e o bebê já mede 10cm) The USS Enterprise is approaching. She is approaching. Notas importantes: 1. O pronome it só é utilizado no singular. Quando nos referimos a, por exemplo, objetos no plural, o prono- me utilizado deverá ser them. Exemplos: I didn’t really like the movie I didn’t really like it (sing) I didn’t really like the movies I didn’t really like them (plural) 2. As orações classificadas na língua portuguesa comosem sujeito são construídas em inglês pelo uso do pronome it. Nesses casos, é importante observar que o pronome it não está se referindo a nada. 29 My cellphone is broken (Meu celular está quebrado) My cellphones are broken (Meus celulares estão quebrados.) Como é possível observar, o mesmo pronome my pode ex- pressar singular ou plural. Observe mais exemplos. My sister lives near here (Minha irmã mora perto daqui) My sisters live near here (Minhas irmãs moram perto daqui) Assim como nos exemplos anteriores, é possível perce- ber que o mesmo pronome (my) também pode anteceder substantivos femininos singulares ou plurais, sem que se faça necessário alterar o próprio pronome. Observe abaixo uma “rodada” completa dos possessive determiners. My documents are ready Meus documentos estão prontos. Your documents are ready O seu documento está pronto. His documents are ready Os documentos dele estão prontos. Her documents are ready Os doscumentos dela estão prontos. Its documents are ready Os documentos do produto estão prontos.* Our documents are ready Nossos documentos estão prontos. Your documents are ready Os documentos de vocês estão prontos. Their documents are ready Os documentos deles estão prontos. (*) FOI NECESSÁRIO INTRODUZIR ALGUM CONTEXTO NESSE EXEMPLO. OS DOCUMENTOS SE REFEREM A UM PRODUTO, O QUE NO CASO PEDIRIA O USO DO PRONOME ITS. FONTE: YOUTUBE Inglês - Aula 01 - Pronouns F Y multimídia: vídeo Veja mais exemplos: The school and its teachers are waiting for you. A escola e seus professores (os professores da escola) estão esperando por você. The clock was working. Its parts were fixed. O relógio estava funcionando. As peças dele (as peças do relógio) foram consertadas. FONTE: YOUTUBE 1ª aula de inglês - Verbo To be e Pronomes pessoais / Verb to be and personal pronouns F Y multimídia: vídeo 2.1. Possessive Determiner ou Possessive Pronoun Fique muito atento ao que está sendo discutido agora. Em alguns casos, pode ser pedido que o vestibulando opte en- tre os dois tipos de possessivo acima mencionados. Além de ser um ponto que gera uma dúvida razoável, ele tam- bém é muito solicitado em questões gramaticais. Tenha em mente que os Possessive Determiners (my, your, his, her, its, our, their) são aqueles usados normalmente, pois acompanham um substantivo. Você só os substituirá pelos Possessive Pronouns (mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs) em situações especí- ficas. São elas: 1. Quando o substantivo a que se referir o pronome estiver omitido/subentendido. Exemplo: I can’t find my pen. Can I use yours? (Eu não consigo encontrar minha caneta. Posso usar a sua [caneta])? 2. Quando o substantivo a que se refere o pronome estiver antes do próprio pronome. Exemplo: It belongs to a friend of mine. (Isto pertence a um amigo meu). 3. Após preposições. 30 Exemplo: They will come with their parents, and we’ll come with ours. (Eles virão com os pais deles, e nós, com os nossos). 3. Reflexive pronouns REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS Myself Yourself Himself Herself Itself Ourselves Yourselves Themselves É bastante simples identificar os Reflexive pronouns: eles são aqueles terminados em self (singular) ou selves (plural) e tem uso reflexivo (como o próprio nome sugere) ou enfático. FONTE: YOUTUBE 3 formas de usar os pronomes reflexivos (reflexive pronouns) F Y multimídia: vídeo 3.1. Uso reflexivo É o uso mais comum e acontece quando sujeito e objeto em uma oração são o mesmo. Exemplo: I consider myself a good friend. (Eu me considero um bom amigo.) No exemplo anterior, o sujeito da oração (I) é o mesmo do objeto (myself). Quando essa situação acontece, é necessá- rio o uso do correspondente reflexive pronoun. Importante: Devido à interferência da língua portuguesa, é bastante comum a ocorrência de erros como I consider me a good friend. Observe agora usos com os outros pronomes: He considers himself a good friend. (Ele se considera um bom amigo) She considers herself a good friend. (Ela se considera uma boa amiga) The picture speaks for itself. (A foto/imagem fala por si mesma) 3.1.1. Listeners (Plural) 1.ª pessoa pl – We consider ourselves good friends (Nós nos consideramos bons amigos) 2.ª pessoa pl – You consider yourselves good friends. (Vocês se consideram bons amigos) 3.ª pessoa pl – They consider themselves good friends. (Elas/eles se consideram bons amigos) 3.1.2. Uso reflexivo: uso específico Esse uso específico dos Reflexive Pronouns costuma cau- sar certo desconforto ao leitor brasileiro. Observe alguns exemplos: She herself knows how to do it. (Ela mesma sabe como fazer isto) I myself don’t understand the problem. (Eu mesmo / Eu pessoalmente não entendo o problema). Assim como no uso reflexivo, existe repetição de sujeito/ objeto. 4. Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder A vast study seeks to understand the genetic underpinnings of ADHD That may change social attitudes to the condition PRINT EDITION | SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY. NOV 29TH 2018 True disorder or mythical modern ailment? Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is one of the most controver- sial topics in psychiatry. Not for the first time, the internet is brimming with conflicting information. Some deplore a lack of recognition and insufficient diagnoses and treat- ment. Others denounce overdiagnosis and overtreatment, and argue that the condition is bandied about willy-nilly as an excuse for poor parenting. 31 FONTE: YOUTUBE Pronouns 1 Song – Learn Grammar – Learning Upgrade App F Y multimídia: vídeo Identifying the inherited underpinnings of ADHD has proved challenging. Studies of twins with and without its eponymous symptoms suggest that genetic factors bear between 70% and 80% of the blame for causing it. There is not, though—as there is in the case of (say) colour blind- ness—a clear gene or genes on which that blame can be pinned. Instead, the presumption is that a range of small and hard-to-detect tweaks in the sequence of DNA letters (known as nucleotides) combine to bring about suscepti- bility to the disorder. Environmental factors such as social deprivation and low birthweight play a greater or lesser role (or sometimes none at all) depending on exactly which genetic tweaks are present. Now, a dozen of those tweaks have been identified by what is the first large-scale investigation of the mat- ter. An international consortium of more than 200 ge- neticists and ADHD experts have published, in Nature Genetics, what is known as a genome-wide association study (gwas). The tweaks being sought, called sin- gle-nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs, are the simplest possible differences between two genomes—namely variations between individuals of single genetic letters in particular spots in the DNA sequence. The researchers looked at SNP patterns in the genomes of 55,000 Euro- peans, more than 20,000 of whom had been diagnosed with ADHD, seeking SNP variants consistently associat- ed with the condition. Understanding the roles of the genes these dozen SNPs affect will lead to better understanding of ADHD’s causes. Some, for instance, are variations in genes, or the control systems of genes, involved in determining how brains de- velop in the womb and in early childhood. Others relate to how brain cells communicate with each other. Such understanding may also lead to ideas for new drugs to treat the condition. Comparing this study with similar ones on what may be related conditions can also be informative. The SNP pat- tern found, for instance, overlaps with those discovered in GWASs of insomnia. As Stephen Faraone of Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, New York, one of the ADHD study’s leaders, observes, “we’ve known for years that chil- dren with ADHD have sleep problems.” The dozen identified variants do not, on their own, con- fer the disorder. The findings will not, therefore, lead di- rectly to genetic tests for adhd. What they do, though,is dispel the idea that ADHD is merely bad behaviour, or even a mythical condition. And that, of itself, may help to change attitudes towards children who have it, and towards their parents. FONTE: YOUTUBE Nightwish – Song of myself F Y multimídia: música Vocabulary: underpinnings: razões, base ailment: enfermidade; doença brimming: cheio ;transbordante deplore: deplorar lack of: falta de willy-nilly: a esmo; indiscriminadamente inherited: herdado bear: lidar; tolerar blindness: cegueira tweak: ajuste; mudança sought: procurado dispel: espalhar; dispersar; dissipar FONTE: YOUTUBE The White Stripes – I Just Don't Know What To do With Myself F Y multimídia: música 32 www.busuu.com/pt multimídia: site Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) Para os próximos 8 exercícios, escolha a alternativa que faz uso correto dos pronomes. 1. George is always daydreaming. _________ is never connected to reality. a) Him b) Them c) Ourselves d) He e) She 2. I depend on my computer. I simply can’t live without _______. a) Him b) He c) Them d) Its e) It 3. In our modern world, computers are everywhere. Smart people have to learn how to deal with __________. a) Itself b) Them c) It d) Their e) Theirs 4. Janeth entered the room and took a quick look at ________ in the mirror. a) Ourselves b) Them c) Her d) Himself e) Herself 5. Parents should keep an eye on ____________ young kids at all times. a) Their b) Them c) Themselves d) Yours e) Theirs 6. You got a loan to open your business. I will do the same to open __________. a) Me b) Myself c) Mine d) Their e) My 7. He ________ built the car that won the championship. a) Him b) Himself c) Herself d) His e) Ourselves 8. Sarah likes______, but I don’t like _______. a) Me – her b) I – she c) Me – hers d) I – her e) Me – herself TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 2 QUESTÕES: Did you know? Where there are salmon streams there usually are bears. And Vancouver Island, with its abundant salmon streams, seems like VIVENCIANDO Ler em inglês amplia o acesso às informações e multiplica as possibilidades de expandir o conhecimento sobre qualquer assunto. Quem deseja ser um cidadão do mundo precisa do inglês. 33 perfect bear habitat. The American black bear (Ursus americanus) does inhabit the island, but oddly there are no grizzly bears (Ur- sus arctos), even though many are found just a short distance away on the mainland of British Columbia. Why? Some scientists believe that the two species of bear simply cannot coexist on islands, even though they do coexist on the continent – perhaps it would mean too much competition in a confined space. But the fact of the matter is that no one really knows. Alice J. Dunn DISPONÍVEL EM: <HTTP://MAGMA.NATIONALGEOGRAPHIC. COM/NGM/0302/ FEATURE06/INDEX.HTML>. ACESSADO EM 04 MAR. 2004. 9. (Fatec) Which of the sentences below is false, accor- ding to the text? a) Grizzly bears inhabit the mainland of British Columbia b) The American black bear and the grizzly bear coex- ist on the continent. c) The American black bear and the grizzly bear coex- ist on islands. d) Bears usually live near salmon streams. e) There are a lot of salmon streams on Vancouver Island. 10. (Fatec) Its in “... with its abundant salmon streams ...” its refers to: a) a salmon stream. b) Vancouver Island. c) the American black bear. d) British Columbia. e) a grizzly bear. A.P.A. Fixação 1. (Cesgranrio) Mark the option which completes the following sentence with the adequate pronouns: I. Businessmen have ........ own priorities. II. Everyone must feel happy with ........ working habits. III. Working from home allows a mother to spend more time with ........ children. IV. If you have never tried to work at home, you cannot dis- cuss ........ disadvantages. a) I his, II their, III her, IV their. b) I their, II its, III their, IV its. c) I their, II his, III her, IV its. d) I its, II your, III its, IV their. e) I his, II his, III their, IV your. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Perhaps the only small thing native to Texas are pecans. Near- ly blind Grandma Shaw shared her top-secret recipe with son Norman, who now bakes the tiny pecans (which have more natural oils and juice than the larger ones) in a brown sugar filling and flaky crust. Just pop IT in the oven for eight minutes at 300 degrees, add a scoop of vanilla ice cream, and bliss! One 9-inch pecan pie is $16.95, which includes free shipping by second-day air in the continental United States. Contact Cryer Creek Kitchens. Phone: 800-468-0088. Fax: 903-872-9204. 2. (Uel) In the text, “it” refers to: a) oven. b) crust. c) scoop. d) recipe. e) ice cream. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Literature is the only place in any society where, within the secre- cy of our own heads, we can hear voices talking about everything in every possible way. The reason for ensuring that privileged are- na is preserved is not that writers want the absolute freedom to say and do whatever THEY please. It is that we, all of us, readers and writers and citizens and generals and godmen need that litt- le, unimportant-looking room. We do not need to call it sacred, but we need to remember it is necessary. 3. (Uel) In the text, THEY refers to: a) readers. b) citizens. c) voices. d) writers. e) heads. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO The political party may well be the most important institution in a democracy, for it is the instrument through which modern democracies govern themselves. Parties not only recruit people to fill top government positions and formulate the policies those officials will carry out; they also bring together under THEIR ban- ners disparate sectors of the electorate, thereby providing gover- nment with a broadly based popular legitimacy. These functions are essential to the operation of any government.” 4. (FGV) O pronome em maiúsculo “THEIR” refere-se a: a) policies. b) people. c) officials. d) parties. e) democracies. 5. (Unitau) Assinale a alternativa que corresponde à se- quência de pronomes que mais adequadamente com- pletam a sentença a seguir: ____cat is sick because______ ate _____spoiled food over there. a) its; he; that b) its; he; this c) his; its; this d) its; it; that e) his; it; that TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO: Why is the South Pole colder than the North Pole? Robert Binds- chadler, a senior fellow and glaciologist at NASA’s Goddard Spa- ce Flight Center, explains. 34 Both polar regions of the earth are cold, primarily because they receive far less solar radiation than the tropics and mid-latitudes do. At either pole the sun never rises more than 23.5 degrees above the horizon and both locations experience six months of continuous darkness. Moreover, most of the sunlight that does shine on the polar regions is reflected by the bright white surface. What makes the South Pole so much colder than the North Pole is that it sits on top of a very thick ice sheet, which 1itself 4sits on a continent. The surface of the ice sheet at the South Pole is more than 9,000 feet in elevation – more than a mile and a half above sea level. Antarctica is by far the highest continent on the earth. In comparison, the North Pole 2rests in the middle of the Arctic Ocean, where the surface of floating ice 5rides only a foot or so above the surrounding sea. The Arctic Ocean also 3acts as an effective heat reservoir, warming the cold atmosphere in the winter and drawing heat from the atmosphere in the summer. <HTTP://WWW.SCIAM.COM> 6. (UFMG) The word “itself” (ref. 1) refers to: a) a thick ice sheet. b) a continent. c) the South Pole. d) the North Pole. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Answer the questions with information from the text. 7. (PUC-RS) Fill in the gaps with the suitable pronouns: a) my – she – her – his b) my – it – our – its c) his – it – his – her d) his – he – his – its e) its – he – our – our TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 3 QUESTÕESDrinking problem For years, athletes have been told to gulp lots of water to avoid dehydration. But a new study in The New England Journal of Medicine shows that some long-distance runners are overdoing it. Researchers found that 13 percent of 488 competitors at the 2002 Boston Marathon drank so much fluid they developed hyponatremia, a life-threatening condition in which the blood salt levels plummet. But with warmer weather on the horizon, weekend warriors still need to worry about dehydration, which can lead to heat exhaustion and heat-stroke. According to the American Council on Exercise (acefitness.org), drinking plain H2O is usually preferable to sports drinks. For moderate exerci- se of 60 minutes or less, drink about eight ounces of water 20 to 30 minutes prior to working out; four to eight ounces every 10 to 15 minutes during exercise and eight ounces or more within 30 minutes of finishing. 35 8. (Unesp) Os pronomes it e they, em destaque no texto, referem-se respectivamente a: a) beber muita água e 488 competidores. b) desidratação e pesquisadores. c) beber muita água e 13 por cento dos 488 competidores. d) desidratação e 13 por cento dos 488 competidores. e) beber muita água e pesquisadores. 9. (Unesp) A causa para os atletas citados no texto de- senvolverem hiponatremia foi: a) o nível de sal no sangue ter permanecido o mesmo. b) consequência de desidratação durante a competição. c) consequência da exaustão devido à competição. d) o fato de serem corredores de longa distância. e) a ingestão de muito líquido durante a competição. 10. (Unesp) As duas ocorrências da conjunção but no tex- to apresentam uma ideia de: a) adição. b) causa. c) concessão. d) contraste. e) substituição. A.P.A. Complementar TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 3 QUESTÕES Climate change: forecast for 2100 is floods and heat ... and it’s man’s fault BY NICK ALLEN 9:04PM BST 16 Aug 2013 Climate scientists have concluded that temperatures could jump by up to 5°C and sea levels could rise by up to 82 cm by the end of the century, according to a leaked draft of a United Nations (UN) report. The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) also said there was a 95 per cent likelihood that global war- ming is caused by human activities. That was the highest asses- sment so far from the IPCC, which put the figure at 90 per cent in a previous report in 2007, 66 per cent in 2001, and just over 50 per cent in 1995. Reto Knutti, a professor at the Swiss Fede-ral Institute of Tech- nology in Zurich, said: “We have got quite a bit more certain that climate change is largely man-made. We’re less certain than many would hope about the local impacts.” The IPCC re- port, the first of three in 2013 and 2014, will face intense scru- tiny particularly after errors in the 2007 study, which wrongly predicted that all Himalayan glaciers could melt by 2035. Al- most 200 governments have agreed to try to limit global war- ming to below 2°C above pre-industrial times, which is seen as a threshold for dangerous changes including more droughts, extinctions, floods and rising seas that could swamp coastal regions and island nations. Temperatures have already risen by 0.8°C since the Industrial Revolution. The report will say there is a high risk global temperatures will rise by more than 2°C this century. They could rise anywhere from about 0.6°C to almost 5°C a wider range at both ends of the scale than predicted in the 2007 report. It will also say evidence of rising sea levels is “unequivocal”. The report projects seas will rise by between 30 cm and 82 cm by the late 21st century. In 2007 the estimated rise was between 18 cm and 58 cm, but that did not fully account for changes in Antarctica and Greenland. Scientists say it is harder to predict local impacts. Drew Shin- dell, a Nasa scientist, said: “I talk to people in regional power planning. They ask, ‘What’s the temperature going to be in this region in the next 20 to 30 years, because that’s where our power grid is?’ We can’t really tell.” ADAPTED FROM <TELEGRAPH.CO.UK> 1. (UFPR) Consider the following statements concerning global warming and the leaked draft of the IPCC report: 1. Scientists think it is 95% likely that human activity is causing global warming. 2. Temperatures could be 5°C warmer by the end of the current century. 3. Sea levels are not likely to be higher than today by the end of the century. 4. Scientists are surer now than in 2007 that humans are causing global warming. 5. 50% of the scientists believed humans were the cause of climate change in 1995. Which of the statements above are TRUE, according to the text? a) Only statements 1, 3 and 5. b) Only statements 2, 3 and 4. c) Only statements 3 and 5. d) Only statements 1, 2 and 4. e) Only statements 2 and 5. 2. (UFPR) Considering what the text says about the IPCC and its predictions and conclusions on global warming, mark true (T) or false (F) for the following statements: ( ) The IPCC made a wrong prediction about the Hi- malayas in the 2007 report. ( ) Himalayan glaciers will certainly disappear by 2035 because of global warming. ( ) The IPCC can now be sure of how climate change will impact different locations. ( ) IPCC’s new report will be carefully examined after the errors committed in 2007. ( ) Global warming will have a huge impact in Swiss because of its large glaciers. Mark the alternative which presents the correct se- quence, from top to bottom. a) T – F – F – T – F. b) F – T – T – F – T c) T – F – T – F – T. d) F – F – F – T – T. e) T – T – T – T – F. 36 3. (UFPR) Mark the correct alternative, according to the text. The word “it”, in boldface and italics (para- graph 5), refers to: a) global warming. b) the greenhouse effect. c) rising sea levels. d) the 21st century. e) the IPCC report. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 7 QUESTÕES One of the major effects of eating too much sugar is a high in- cidence of tooth decay. When we eat something with sugar in it, particularly refined sugar, enzymes in the saliva in the mouth begin to work immediately to change that sugar into a type of carbohydrate. 1As one eats, particles of the sugary food get stuck between the teeth and around the gums. As the food changes its chemical composition, the resultant carbohydrate produces bacteria that begin to eat away at the enamel on the outside of our teeth. This is 2actually the decaying of the tooth. 3Now, if this process happens each time we eat sugar, we can see that eating excessive amounts of sugar causes more and more tooth decay. It is true that some tooth decay can be avoided with immediate brushing after eating, removing all the particles of food trapped in the teeth. 4However, sweets are often eaten as snacks betwe- en meals and during the day, times when people generally do not brush after eating. 5Therefore, the dangerous process of tooth decay is allowed to continue. SMALLEY, R. L. AND HANK, M.R. REFINING COMPOSITION SKILLS. 1982, MACMILLAN PUBLISHING CO., INC., P.255. 4. (Cesgranrio) Bacteria are very small organisms which... a) refine sugary food around the gums. b) wear away the enamel of the teeth. c) result in carbohydrates in the mouth. d) change the composition of the process. e) stick to the particles of sugary food. 5. (Cesgranrio) According to the text, whenever we eat sugary food... a) enzymes change it into refined sugar. b) there is a low incidence of tooth decay. c) the sugar in the mouth turns into saliva. d) the teeth begin to work into the carbohydrates. e) a type of carbohydrate is produced by the saliva. 6. (Cesgranrio) According to the text, eating large amounts of sugar... a) results in accumulating weight. b) causes growing chemical composition. c) postpones the process of tooth decay. d) brings about the decaying of the teeth. e) wears away carbohydrate gain in the body. 7. (Cesgranrio) According to the text, what happens to thefood we eat? a) It gets stuck when we eat gum. b) It is eaten away by the bacteria. c) It attacks the enamel covering the teeth. d) It produces particles of bacteria in the mouth. e) It has its chemical compostion changed in the mouth. 8. (Cesgranrio) In order to prevent tooth decay one should... a) remove the decayed tooth. b) avoid eating particles of food. c) eat neither between meals nor during the day. d) brush the teeth immediately before eating. e) brush the teeth immediately after having eaten. 9. (Cesgranrio) The pronoun IT in the sentence “When we eat something with sugar in it, particularly refined sugar, enzymes in the saliva in the mouth begin to work immediately to change that sugar into a type of carbohy- drate.” refers to the word... a) saliva. b) sugar. c) mouth. d) something. e) refined sugar. 10. (Cesgranrio) Mark the option that contains the ap- propriate pronouns to complete the sentences below. Animals’ teeth are changing ...(I)... composition. That animal had ...(II)... teeth in perfect conditions. He brushes ...(III)... teeth whenever he eats something. If the patient dies, we call ...(IV)... relatives. The bacteria found ...(V)... way to the stomach. a) (I) their, (II) its, (III) his, (IV) his, (V) their b) (I) its, (II) their, (III) its, (IV) his, (V) its. c) (I) their, (II) its, (III) her, (IV) her, (V) his. d) (I) his, (II) their, (III) his, (IV) her, (V) their. e) (I) their, (II) his, (III) their, (IV) its, (V) her. 11. ZOMBIE NEUROSCIENCE I don’t know if cockroaches dream, but I imagine if they do, jewel wasps feature prominently in their nightmares. These small, so- litary tropical wasps are of little concern to us humans; after all, they don’t manipulate our minds so that they can serve us up as willing, living meals to their newborns, as they do to unsus- pecting cockroaches. The story is simple, if grotesque: the female wasp controls the minds of the cockroaches she feeds to her of- fspring, taking away their sense of fear or will to escape their fate. What turns a once healthy cockroach into a mindless zombie it’s venom. Not just any venom, either: a specific venom that acts like a drug, targeting the cockroach’s brain. (ADAPTADO DE CHRISTIE WILCOX, ZOMBIE NEUROSCIENCE. SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, NEW YORK, V. 315, N. 2, P. 70–73, 2016.) De acordo com o autor, a) certas baratas conseguem escapar de ataques de vespas comportando-se como zumbis. b) baratas são capazes de ações predatórias que mal podemos imaginar. 37 c) vespas fêmeas de uma certa espécie podem con- trolar a mente das baratas. d) uma barata pode inocular um veneno que transfor- ma uma outra barata em um zumbi. A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. Complete the text below using personal, possessive or reflexive pronouns. Ernest Hemingway was probably the greatest American writer in the 20th century. __________ was born in the USA in the beginning of the 20th century but traveled and lived in many countries. All of _________ books deal mostly with the universe of the simple men. This is exactly what happens in his most fa- mous book “The Old Man and the Sea”. _________ is about a fisherman who is facing many difficulties to earn a life. In one last try to get some fish, the fisherman goes to the sea and catches a gigantic fish, ties __________ to his boat and takes it to his village, so it can be eaten by people. He thinks that the fish is so big that it can be food to all of _________. All Hemingway’s works are extremely famous around the world, especially three of _________: ‘For whom the bell tolls’, ‘Snows of Kilimanjaro’ and ‘Farewell to Arms. He-mingway __________ was a fisherman, pugilist and fought in the Spanish Civil War in the 1930’s. In America, Hemingway is still seen as a true hero and people use __________ personal history to inspire _________ lives. Unfortunately, Hemingway fell into a very strong depression and killed _________ in 1961, what couldn’t be enough to era- se all his achievements. Gabarito Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A) 1. D 2. E 3. B 4. E 5. A 6. C 7. B 8. A 9. C 10. B A.P.A. Fixação 1. C 2. B 3. D 4. D 5. E 6. A 7. B 8. C 9. E 10. D A.P.A. Complementar 1. D 2. A 3. E 4. B 5. E 6. D 7. E 8. E 9. D 10. A 11. C A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. he – his - it – it – them – them – himself – his - their- himself 38 1. Present tenses (tempos verbais do presente) A ideia desta aula é fazer uma coletânea das formas ver- bais da língua inglesa que, de uma maneira ou de outra, são compreendidas como formas verbais dos tempos presentes do português. Antes de qualquer coisa, é fundamental ter em mente que, quando alguém lê um texto em língua estrangei- ra, a não está traduzindo o texto, mas negociando o seu sig- nificado com sua língua materna. A tradução é uma divisão do estudo de idiomas e, apesar do senso comum dizer “eu não estou conseguindo traduzir este texto”, não há tempo suficiente nos vestibulares para que se faça uma tradução. Vários tempos e formas verbais da língua inglesa, após uma rápida leitura, “chegam” para o leitor como se esti- vessem no pre sente do indicativo em português, indepen- dentemente de como são chamados em inglês. Portanto, o que se propõe aqui é que se agrupem algumas formas e tempos verbais do inglês que são "entendidos" como pre- sente. São elas: simple present, to be, there to be e alguns modal verbs. 2. Simple present (regra geral) A grande maioria dos verbos em inglês segue as regras apresentadas neste item, portanto muita atenção. Ao contrário do português, que apresenta múltiplas desinên- cias (o final dos verbos), o inglês normalmente não tem desinências, com a exceção sendo a adição da letra “s” às terceiras pessoas do singular (he, she, it). Observe os exem- plos a seguir: To need = precisar, necessitar I need to work better. (Eu preciso trabalhar melhor) You need to work better. (Você precisa trabalhar melhor) He needs to work better. (Ele precisa trabalhar melhor) She needs to work better. (Ela precisa trabalhar melhor) It needs improvements. (Isto precisa de melhorias) We need to work better. (Nós precisamos traba- lhar melhor) You need to work better. (Vocês precisam traba- lhar melhor) They need to work better. (Eles/elas precisam tra- balhar melhor) Percebe-se que, enquanto a língua inglesa acrescenta à base form dos verbos (infinitivo sem a partícula "to") a letra "s" na terceira pessoa do singular (he, she, it), a lín- gua portuguesa acrescenta várias desinências aos verbos (preciso, precisa, precisamos, etc). Casos particulares: 1. To have = ter, possuir Exemplos: I have, you have, he/she/it has, we have, you have, they have. (NUNCA use he/she/it haves) 2. A verbos terminados em "s", "y" (precedido por vogal), "ch", "sh", "x" e "o", "z", "ss" acrescenta- -se “es” em vez de somente "s". Exemplos: I wash – He washes You watch – She watches They go – It goes I fix – She fixes 3. Verbos terminados em "y" precedido de consoan- te. Substitua o "y" por "ies" Exemplos: I fly – it flies They try – He tries. THE HERE AND NOW HABILIDADES: 5, 6, 18 e 30 COMPETÊNCIAS: 2, 6 e 9 CLASS 4 39 Do we need to study more? (Nós precisamos estudar mais?) Do you need to study more? (Vocês precisam estudar mais?) Do they need to study more? (Eles/elas precisam estudar mais?) FONTE: YOUTUBE 3ª aula de inglês - Simple Present / Presente Simples F Y multimídia: vídeo 3. To be O verbo to be não segue as mesmas regras que orientam a maioria dos verbos em inglês. Ele é o único que apresenta três formas de presente. São elas: I am Brazilian. (Eu sou brasileiro) He/She/It is from the Netherlands. (Ele/ela/isto é da Holanda.) You/We/They are thirsty. (Você(s)/Nós/Eles(as) estão com sede) Talvez a maior dificuldade ao se lidar com o verbo to be resida no fato de que, ao ser vertido para o português, ele possa ter tanto estar quanto ser como significado, depen- dendo do contexto em que o verboestá inserido. 3.1. Formas negativas Para se conseguir as formas negativas do verbo to be, de- ve-se apenas acrescentar a partícula not à forma afirmativa. Em alguns casos, o verbo e a palavra not podem ser contra- ídos. Observe as contrações possíveis (abaixo apresentadas). I am not Brazilian. (Eu não sou brasileiro) He/She/It is not (isn’t) from the Netherlands. (Ele/ela/isto não é da Holanda.) You/We/They are not (aren’t) thirsty. (Você(s)/ Nós/Eles(as) não estão com sede.) 3.2. Formas interrogativas Para que se obtenham as formas interrogativas do verbo to be, deve-se apenas inverter a posição do verbo e do sujeito. 2.1. Formas negativas do simple present A forma negativa dos verbos no simple present segue uma norma bem simples: acrescente do not (don’t) quando o sujeito for I, you, we, they; acrescente does not (doesn’t) quando o sujeito for he, she, it. Importante: Do e does fazem as vezes de verbo auxiliar nesses casos, ou seja: não têm função alguma a não ser mostrar ao leitor a conjugação da frase. Como é essa a fun- ção deles, são eles que recebem a desinência -s da terceira pessoa do singular. Dessa maneira, ao se utilizar tanto do quanto does, o verbo da oração permanece na base form. Exemplos: I don’t (do not) need to study better. (Eu não preciso estudar melhor) You don’t (do not) need to study better. (Você não precisa estudar melhor) He doesn’t (does not) need to study better. (Ele não precisa estudar melhor) She doesn’t (does not) need to study better. (Ela não precisa estudar melhor) It doesn’t (does not) need improvements. (Isto não precisa de melhorias) We don’t (do not) need to study better. (Nós não precisamos estudar melhor) You don’t (do not) need to study better. (Vocês não precisam estudar melhor) They don’t (do not)need to study better. (Eles/ elas não precisam estudar melhor) 2.2.Formas interrogativas Para que se obtenham as formas interrogativas dos verbos no simple present, deve-se fazer uso dos verbos auxiliares do (para os pronomes I, you, we, they) e does (he, she, it), colocados antes dos respectivos sujeitos. Observe os exemplos a seguir: Do I need to study more? (Eu preciso estudar mais?) Do you need to study more? (Você precisa estu- dar mais?) Does he need to study more? (Ele precisa estu- dar mais?) Does she need to study more? (Ela precisa es- tudar mais?) Does it need improvements? (Isto precisa de melhorias?) 40 Observe os exemplos: Am I wrong? (Eu estou errado?) Are you (we/they) tired? (Você(s)/Nós/Eles(as) estão cansados?) Is he (she/it) Brazilian? (Ele/ela/isto é do Brasil?) 4. There to be A estrutura there to be é usualmente entendida como o verbo haver, existir, ocorrer. Ela apresenta duas formas no presente: there is (para o singular) e there are (para o plural). Exemplos: There is a bakery near my school. (Há/existe uma padaria perto da minha escola) There are many bakerys near school. (Há/exis- tem muitas padaria perto da escola) Deve-se acrescentar a partícula not às formas afirmativas do there to be para que se obtenham suas respectivas for- mas negativas. Observe as contrações possíveis (abaixo apresentadas) There is not (isn’t) a single restaurant around here. (Não há/existe um único restaurante próximo daqui) There are not (aren’t) restaurants on your street. (Não há/existem restaurantes na sua rua) 4.1. Formas interrogativas Para que se obtenham as formas interrogativas do verbo there to be, deve-se apenas inverter a posição do verbo e da partícula there. Observe os exemplos: Is there a bakery near your school? (Há/existe uma padaria perto de sua escola?) Are there many bakerys near your school? (Há/ existem muitas padarias perto da escola?) FONTE: YOUTUBE A 04 - There To Be - Inglês - Vestibulando Digital F Y multimídia: vídeo FONTE: YOUTUBE Aulas para ajudar no ENEM, Inglês aula 3 - Present Continuous - parte 1 de 2 F Y multimídia: vídeo 5. Present continuous (present progressive) O Present Continuous apresenta enorme semelhança com o tempo verbal Presente Contínuo da língua portuguesa. Ele é um tempo verbal que serve para expressar ações temporárias ou simultâneas à fala. O Present Continuous (ou Progressive) é formado pelo presente do verbo to be (concordando com cada sujeito) mais um outro verbo no gerund (sufixo ING). Veja os exemplos: I am composing a song right now. (Eu estou compondo uma música neste exato momento.) You are listening my music. (Você está ouvindo minha música.) He is composing a song on his acoustic guitar. (Ele está compondo uma música em sua guitarra.) She is singing in her room. (Ela está cantando no quarto dela.) It is working very well. (Isto está funcionando muito bem.) We are watching a very interesting movie. (Nós estamos assistindo um filme a muito interessante.) You are wasting money. (Vocês estão desperdi- çando dinheiro.) They are surfing the web on their computers. (Elas(es) estão navegando na internet em com- putadores.) As formas interrogativas do Present Continuous são dadas pela inversão do sujeito com o verbo to be. Exemplos: Are you paying attention to the instructions? (Você está prestando atenção às instruções?) 41 Is it working properly? (Isto está funcionan- do corretamente?) As formas negativas do Present Continuous são dadas pela adição de not às formas do to be. She is not (isn’t) composing a music. (Ela não está compondo uma música.) I am not thinking about it. (Eu não estou pen- sando sobre isso.) 5.1. Apêndice 5.1.1. Uso enfático dos auxiliares do e does Além de serem utilizados nas formas negativas e interro- gativas, os auxiliares do e does também podem ser utiliza- dos em frases afirmativas com função enfática. Estude os exemplos a seguir: She loves you (Ela te ama) She does love you (Ela realmente te ama) I speak English (Eu falo inglês) I do speak English (Eu realmente falo/ Eu falo muito bem inglês) Note que, ao se enfatizar a ação utilizando o verbo auxiliar, a desinência desaparece do verbo, pois é o verbo auxiliar que, como se sabe, sofre as alterações necessárias. www.nytimes.com/video multimídia: site 6. Combating tropical disease Scanning mosquitoes with infrared light could help to control malaria Their spectra are full of valuable information PRINT EDITION | SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY. DEC 18TH 2018 Malaria killed 435,000 people last year, most of them in Africa. The parasite that causes the illness is carried by fe- males of some, but not all, species of mosquitoes of the genus Anopheles. An insect becomes infected by biting an infected human being. Over the course of ten to 12 days, the parasites then multiply inside her. Once this has hap- pened she transmits them with her bite. FONTE: YOUTUBE Fool's Garden - Lemon Tree F Y multimídia: música The threat posed by an individual mosquito thus depends on its species, sex and age. Knowing these for lots of local insects gives a better idea of where, when and how to in- tervene in a particular place. If the locals are, for example, of a species that prefers to bite people inside houses, or to rest indoors after feeding, fumigating household interiors is the best approach. If not, it may be better to locate and disrupt breeding sites, using aerial spraying. Sex is easy to determine. Males have bushy mouths—in es- sence, beards. Females do not. Determining species and age, though, is slow and laborious. dna must be sequenced. Bod- ies must be dissected under microscopes. Chemical analyses must be performed. Laboratories in Britain and Tanzania are therefore testing an alternative—infrared spectroscopy. Mario González-Jiménez, a chemist at the University of Glasgow, uses a diamond and a piece of steel that act as a hammer and anvil, crushing the mosquito to be analysed. The infrared light is then provided by a laser. With the insect duly splattered across one facet of the diamond, this laser is shone through the crystal onto it. The light reflected backout of the crystal by the insect’s remains is run through a spectroscope for analysis. Part of the incident light will have been absorbed by various chemicals in the mosquito—particularly chitin (a structural carbohydrate), proteins and lipids in the animal’s cuticle. This absorption shows up in the reflected light’s spectrum as an absence of certain frequencies. These absences are called Fraunhofer lines, after the German physicist who dis- covered them two centuries ago. Particular molecules cre- ate particular patterns of Fraunhofer lines, as the missing light energy has been absorbed to drive the vibrations of atomic bonds within those molecules. Properly analysed, Fraunhofer lines provide information about the exact chemical make-up of whatever is reflecting the light. Their patterns in spectra therefore correspond to 42 the different chemistries of species, sexes and ages. That permits the construction of a library, with which unknown insects can be compared. Diamond geezerst hat, at least, is the theory. Dr González- Jiménez is trying to put it into practice. His methods are now 83% accurate at recognising species, and close to 100% accurate at recognising age. He and his colleagues are also using the process to try to determine how resistant the now- dead insect being examined would have been to insecticides. What works in a laboratory in a Scottish city might not, though, work in the African countryside. The person in charge of testing that out is Fredros Okumu, science director of the Ifakara Health Institute, a Tanzanian organisation. Ifakara runs Mosquito City, a research facility in the Kilombero River valley. Mosquito City’s buzzing, whining “biospheres” mimic local field conditions, even down to banana plants and goats. Besides testing the equipment, Dr Okumu and his team are also trying to extend the range of data that mosquito spectra can provide, including into the way the insects behave. Some mosquitoes, for example, feed only on people. Others dine as well on chickens, cows and goats. This is all valuable information. But it will be much more valuable if it can be gathered easily in the field. Engineers at Glasgow are therefore working on a laser optimised to emit light at the frequencies best suited for analysing mosquitoes. Meanwhile, those at Ifakara are experimenting with shoebox-sized versions of the apparatus that can be taken into the countryside. Their aim is eventually to shrink this to something the size of a mobile phone. That could shine a whole new light on the problem of malaria. FONTE: YOUTUBE The Bangles - Eternal Flame (Official Video) F Y multimídia: música Vocabulary: Anvil: bigorna duly: devidamente; pontualmente splatter/splattered: esparramar; esguichar absence: ausência bonds: vínculo; ligação whine/whinning: choramingar range: alcance; variação gather: juntar; coletar shrink: espremer; apertar; encolher; reduzir put into: inserir; colocar Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. A forma interrogativa de “Beto lives in Paris” é: a) Does Beto lives in Paris? b) Do Beto lives in Paris? c) Is Beto live in Paris? d) Does Beto live in Paris? e) Does not Beto live in Paris? 2. A forma negativa de “People are not afraid of sur- geries” é: a) People are not afraid of surgeries. b) People don’t afraid of surgeries. c) People doesn’t afraid of surgeries. d) People not afraid of surgeries. e) Are not people afraid of surgeries. 3. A frase, em inglês, correspondente a “Você não sabe que o teste de matemática é amanhã?” é: a) Don’t you know that the Math test is tomorrow? b) Do you know not that the Math test is tomorrow? c) Do you not know that the Math test is tomorrow? d) You know not that the Math test is tomorrow? e) Not you know that the Math test is tomorrow? 4. A frase “Jimmy plays the guitar very well” tem como forma negativa: a) Jimmy doesn’t plays the guitar very well. b) Jimmy don’t play the guitar very well. c) Jimmy doesn’t play the guitar very well. d) Jimmy plays not the guitar very well. e) Jimmy not play the guitar very well. 5. Complete with Simple Present or Present Continuous (Progressive) She generally _____________ the piano, but at present she _____________ the guitar. a) is playing / plays b) is plaing / plays c) plays / is playing d) playing / are playing e) plays / is plaing 6. (Unesp) He doesn’t_______ anymore. a) smoking b) no smoking c) smokes d) smoked e) smoke 43 1. (ITA) Quais os verbos que devem preencher as lacu- nas II a III respectivamente? a) are rising - raise b) are raising - rise c) are rising - rise d) is raising - raise e) is rising - rise TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Why do bees fuss about so much when they fly, instead of for- ming a tidy flock like birds? Birds flying in a flock keep to a highly ordered pattern, whereas a swarm of bees is a cloud of chaos. This difference has long puzzled scientists, but now a team of Japanese researchers has come up with a simple mathematical model to explain it. [The researchers] began with a simple ana- logy. Stars in a galaxy move under the influence of each other’s gravity in a way that can be described by Newton’s laws. Identify the influences felt by an insect or bird, the researchers reasoned, and its flying patterns should be just as easy to predict. ADAPTED FROM NEW SCIENTIST, 15 JUNE 1996 2. (Fuvest) A forma correta do singular de “Why do bees fuss about so much when they fly?” é: a) Why does bee fuss about so much when it fly? b) Why do an bee fusses about so much when it flies? c) Why does a bee fuss about so much when it flies? d) Why does the bee fuss about so much when it fly? e) Why does a bee fusses about so much when it flies? TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Tess of the D’Urbervilles is the story of the seduction, betrayal, and destruction of an innocent girl, Tess Durbeyfield, who is led by her foolish parents into thinking she comes from an ancient noble family, the D’Urbervilles. Encouraged to claim Kingship with the family, Tess is seduced by the suave, plausible Alec D’Urberville, who abandons her when she bears his baby. The child dies, and Tess finds a new love with the egotistic, self-righteous Angel Clare. When he hears her story on their wedding night, he too abandons her. In despair, Tess murders Alec. She 1finds a few fleeting days of hap-piness with Clare, who returns to her before she is captured and hanged. In the famous last lines of the novel, which could fit any other of Hardy’s works almost as well, “ ‘Justice’ was done, and the President of the Immortals ... had ended his sport with views through compassionate eyes the difference between the fate human beings deserve and the one that they suffer.” 3. (UFRGS) The correct verbal forms of the nouns “se- duction”, “betrayal”, and “destruction” are: a) seduce - betray - destroy. b) seduct - betray - destroy. c) seduce - betrayal - destruct. d) seduct - betrayal - destruct. e) seduce - betray - destruct. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO International advertising can be a risky business. When McDonald’s launched Le Big Mac in Paris, it discovered that in local slang this 7. Books________ very good companions, aren’t they? a) are b) is c) aren’t d) don’t be e) isn’t 8. He ____________ pudding. Why __________ him something else? a) don’t like / do you offer b) doesn’t likes / don’t you offer c) doesn’t like / don’t you offers d) doesn’t like / don’t you offer e) aren’t like / do not you offer 9. Complete with Simple Present or Present Continu- ous (Progressive) She usually _______________ against injustice, but at this moment she ____________ against unemployment. a) protest / protesting b) protests / is protesting c) is protesting / protests d) protest / are protesting e) protested / are protesting 10. Complete with Simple Present or Present Continu- ous (Progressive) Today he _______________ jeans and T- shirts, but he usually _______________a suit at work. a) is wearing / wears b) wears / is wearing c) wearing / wear d) wear / are wearing e) has wearing / wearing A.P.A. Fixação TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO BRAZIL’S NETWORK BOOM BRAZIL IS ON THE VERGE OF A NETWORK SURGE. BUT EXACTLY HOW THEY’LL ALL IS STILL UP IN THE AIR. Probably the only thing that Brazil’s two pay TV heavywei- ghts, Globo and TVA, agree ___(I)___ is that the country’s multichannel business is on the verge of a boom. The two companies, which have fought one of the most IMPASSIO- NED battles for dominance to be found anywhere in the pay TV world, ___(II)___ the intensity of their cable and wireless competition and extending it to direct-to-home television this year. And with the number of Brazilian pay TV subscri- bers expected to ___(III)___ fivefold to 5 million by the end of the decade, both sides are FEVERISHLY putting together new programming services to make their packages as ALLU- RING as possible. (...) BY IAN KATZ MULTICHANNEL NEWS. INTERNATIONAL, 44 meant “the big pimp”. It is not just a question of language either; national advertising styles also vary considerably. The British like hu- mor and irony in their ads, whereas the Germans regard this appro- ach as frivolous. The French are more sexist than the British and will use semi naked women in almost any context. The Italians generally like to see beautiful people wearing beautiful clothes driving beau- tiful cars. These are not just national stereotypes, but based on hard experience. Different countries also prefer different products. 4. (UFPB) The text is PREDOMINANTLY in the _________. a) present tense b) past tense c) future tense d) present perfect tense e) present progressive tense 5. (Mackenzie) Indicate the alternative that best com- pletes the following sentence. “I ________ WHEN ________ THAT I HAVE TO STUDY.” a) don’t like - she says b) never like - she will tell me c) can’t like - she says d) mustn’t like - she speaks e) don’t like it - she tells me 6. (Mackenzie) Indicate the alternative that best com- pletes the following sentence. “This guide______ use- ful______about the city.” a) gives - information b) have given - information c) is giving - piece of informations d) gave- pieces of informations e) will give - pieces of informations TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO NORTH KOREA SHOP TILL YOU DROP... THE BOMB? The Tokyo District called Akihabara is a vast market for cool vide- ogames, computer gear and pet robots. But according to some young Japanese parliamentarians, Akihabara is to North Korean spies what U.S. atomic-energy labs are to Chinese spooks. The North Koreans troll for gadgets to improve Pyongyang’s weapons - everything from “fish finder” sonar sets to handheld Global Po- sitioning Systems. Aboard one North Korean submarine captured by South Korea last year, “all the radar, GPS and computer terminals were made in Japan,” says Ichita Yamamoto of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. He says Japanese technology is also used in North Korea’s Taepodong missile, which is said to be capable of hitting targets as far away as Alaska and Hawaii. Last week the young lawmakers presented legislation to block the sale of any off-theshelf item deemed useful for North Ko- rean weapons. But Japan has a history of lax export controls. And the weapons builders are finding more and more uses for civilian technology. Which explains why Akihabara has become North Korea’s Los Alamos. NEWSWEEK 7. (Fatec) Assinale a alternativa que contém, respectiva- mente, os mesmos tempos verbais dos verbos destaca- dos na frase a seguir: “He SAYS Japanese technology IS also USED in North Korea’s...’’. a) rans / is run b) lies / is layd c) lais / is lain d) lays / is laid e) runs / is ran 8. (Mackenzie) Indicate the alternative that best com- pletes the following sentence. “Paulo knows how to drive a truck and ______.” a) Mark does neither b) either does Mark c) so does Mark d) nor does Mark e) Mark does either TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO CHRISTMAS If you try to catch a train, a bus or an airplane on December 24th, you may have difficulty in finding a seat. This is the day when many people are traveling home to be with their families on Christmas Day, December 25th. For most British families, this is the most important festival of the year, it combines the Christian celebration of the birth of Christ with the traditional festivities of winter. On Sunday before Christmas many churches hold a carol service where special hymns are sung. Sometimes carol-singers can be heard on the streets as they collect money for charity. Most families decorate their houses with brightly-colored paper, and they usually have a Christmas tree in the corner of the front room, glittering with colored lights and decorations. There are a lot of traditions connected with Christmas, but perhaps the most important one is the giving of presents. Fa- mily members wrap up their gifts and leave them at the bottom of the Christmas tree to be found on Christmas morning. Small children believe that their gifts come from Santa Claus. Their parents tell them that Santa Claus lives in the North Pole and, on the night before Christmas, he travels the world in a sled pulled by reindeer. He goes down the chimneys of houses to leave gifts only for children who have been good. At some time on Christmas Day, the family will sit down to a big turkey dinner followed by desserts specially prepared for the occasion. Later in the afternoon, they may watch the Queen on television as she delivers her traditional Christmas message to the United Kingdom. If they have room for even more food they may en- joy a piece of Christmas cake. December 26th is also a public holiday, and this is the time to visit friends and relatives or be a spectator at one of the many sporting events. FROM: SHEERIN, S.; SEATH, J.; WHITE, G. SPOTLIGHT ON BRITAIN. OXFORD: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1995, P.13. (ADAPTED) 9. (UFSC) Choose the correct proposition(s) to complete the following paragraph. Children ______ a long sock at the end of their bed on Christmas Eve, December 24th, ______ that Santa Claus will come down the chimney 45 ______ night and bring them small presents, fruit and nuts. Their expectations are usually not ______! 01) hang - looking - before the - disapproved 02) leave - hoping - during the - disappointed 04) hide - thinking - on - motivated 08) put - expecting - at - frustrated 16) place - wishing - in - explained 32) have - feeling - after the - disagreed TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Gerald Middleton was a man of 1mildly but persistently depres- sive temperament. 2Such men are not at their best at breakfast, nor is the week before Christmas their happiest time. Both La- rwood and Mrs. Larwood had learned over the years to respect their employer’s melancholy moods by remaining silent. They did so on this morning. The house on Montpellier Square was as 3noiseless as a tomb. Mrs. Middleton had rung up from her house in Marlow as early as eight o’clock to inquire what ar- rangements her husband had made for his annual visit to her. Would he, she asked, arrange to bring down their son John? Mrs. Larwood had tactfully refused to wake Professor Middle- ton; she would see that he phoned Mrs. Middleton during the morning, she said. The message was placed with the letters and newspapers beside Gerald’s plate. The prospect of speaking to his wife on the telephone and, even more, of the family Christmas party 4greatly heightened his de- pression. He decided not to open his letters until he had read the news or to open “The Times” until he had softened his spirits with the more popular daily newspaper which always accompa- nied it. It was an unwise decision: the optimistic presentation of decidedly bad news on the front page turned his passive gloom into active irritation. On the middle page was a lengthy article by his son John.He always swore that he would not read his son’s articles, yet he always did so. Their 5cocksure and sentimental tone at least lent justification to his 6hearty dislike of his younger son, particularly if he accompanied his reading by a mental image of his wife’s cooing admiration of their son’s talent. ADAPTED FROM: WILSON, ANGUS. ANGLO-SAXON ATTITUDES. HARMONDSWORTH: PENGUIN, 1968. P. 11 10. (UFRGS) What justifies the use of verbs in the pres- ent tense in the second sentence (ref. 2) is the fact that that sentence expresses a: a) generalization. b) systematization. c) formalization. d) simplification. e) formulation. A.P.A. Complementar TEXTO PARA AS QUESTÕES 1 A 5 Dengue fever: Millions at risk as a new outbreak of dengue fever sweeps Latin America Apr 19, 2007 — There is no vacci- ne. There is also no good way to treat it — just fluids and the hope that the fever will break. At first it seems like a case of severe flu, but then the fever rises, accompanied by headaches, excruciating joint pain, nausea and rashes. In its most serious form, known as dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF), it involves internal and external bleeding and can result in death. Fuelled by climate change, dengue fever is on the rise again throughout the developing world, particularly in Latin America. According to the World Health Organization, dengue is now endemic in more than 100 tropical and sub-tropical countries around the world, affecting some 50 million people a year, mostly in ur- ban or semi-urban areas. A further 2.5 billion, two-fifths of the world’s population, are considered “at risk”. About 500,000 people, many of them children, are believed each year to de- velop a form of DHF serious enough to require treatment in hospital. Worldwide, 2.5% of DHF cases die; without proper care, the proportion can exceed 20%. Anyone who survives an infection by one of the four viruses that cause the disease gains lifelong immunity from that virus. But subsequent infection by another variant increases the risk of developing DHF, which is becoming much more common in Latin America. In Mexico, for example, just one in 50 cases was hemorrhagic six years ago, says José Ángel Córdoba Villalobos, Mexico’s se-cretary of health. Now one in five is. Last year just over 500,000 cases of dengue were reported in Latin America, including more than 14,000 hemorrhagic cases, 187 of which resulted in death. This year nearly 200,000 dengue cases have already been reported, including 2,693 cases of DHF. At least 37 people have died, including 11 in Paraguay and 17 in Brazil. The dengue viruses are transmitted to humans through the bite of a female Aedes mosquito, which acquires the viruses while feeding, normally on the blood of an infected person. Given that there is no known preventive treatment or anti-viral cure, the only practical way to prevent the viruses’ spread is to eliminate the Aedes mosquitoes by preventing them from breeding. In Mexi- co, the house-to-house programme mounted by the government to get people during the rainy season to remove rubbish and standing water where mosquitoes breed has been extended ye- ar-round — with some success. The number of dengue cases re- ported this year is well down on last year, but the rainy season — the main breeding time for the mosquitoes — has yet to come. <WWW.ECONOMIST.COM>. ADAPTADO. 1. (Unifesp) Os sintomas iniciais da dengue: a) são febre alta, dor na nuca e vômito intermitente. b) causam dores nas juntas devido a pequenas he- morragias. c) são semelhantes aos de uma gripe forte. d) são precursores de hemorragia interna que leva à morte. e) devem ser tratados com ingestão de líquidos e an- titérmicos. 2. (Unifesp) Dengue fever: a) does not have an efficient vaccine, but there are some preventive treatments. b) presents a higher incidence in rural and scarcely populated areas. c) is endemic mainly among people who live near rivers. d) may be transmitted through human contact or the Aedes mosquito bite. e) may be caused by four variants of virus. 46 3. (Unifesp) Segundo a OMS, a população mundial que corre o risco de contrair dengue é de: a) 2,5 bilhões de pessoas. b) 50 milhões de pessoas. c) 50 mil pessoas. d) 500 mil crianças. e) 20% da população de 100 países. 4. (Unifesp) The DHF, the most serious form of dengue: a) does not develop in people who have gained life- long immunity from the virus. b) develops in 20% of cases in Mexico at present. c) caused the death of 20% of people worldwide. d) resulted in 2,693 deaths in Latin America. e) has affected mainly people in Brazil and Paraguay. 5. (Unifesp) A única maneira prática de evitar a dissemi- nação do vírus da dengue é por meio de: a) tratamentos preventivos de saúde pública intensivos. b) programas de cura com antivirais disponíveis para as populações de risco. c) campanhas governamentais para alertar a popu- lação sobre os sintomas. d) medidas para evitar a proliferação do mosquito Aedes. e) programas domiciliares como o mexicano, que ocorre durante a época de chuvas. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 5 QUESTÕES Brow-Raising ‘Mona Lisa’ Discovery: French Engineer Uses Technology to Uncover Secrets of Mysterious Smiler OCT. 18, 2007 The “Mona Lisa” may have a few secrets still, but at least one of the mysteries surrounding Leonardo da Vinci’s 16th-century mas- terpiece has been solved: the lady does indeed have eyebrows. Using a high-tech camera, a French engineer has uncovered what has long been held as a fact about the painting, that its subject was painted without eyebrows or eyelashes. That as- sumption, according to Pascal Cotte, was wrong. Cotte, a Fren- ch photographer and engineer, used a 240 million-pixel camera to photograph the painting outside of its glass encasing at the Louvre in Paris. The camera used infrared technology and strong illumination to scan the painting. With his camera, the engineer was able to virtually peel back layers of the painting revealing how it looked when it was origi- nally painted. The images are currently being shown in San Fran- cisco with a traveling exhibit about the painter. In the process of photographing and scanning the images, Cotte discovered that the “Mona Lisa’s” eyebrows and eyelashes were originally painted on the piece. They disappeared either because of a botched attempt to clean the painting or because the paint’s oil and pigment faded over time. Through the photographs, Cotte also learned the order in which da Vinci painted the “Mona Lisa” and spotted drawings underneath the paint that show a change in the position of her fingers. The images also revealed the touch- -up the painting was given in 1956 to repair damage it suffered after a rock was thrown at the painting. The exhibit, “Da Vinci: An Exhibition of Genius,” runs in San Francisco’s Metre on Center through the end of the year. FONTE: <WWW.ABCNEWS.GO.COM/TECHNOLOGY/ 6. (PUC-SP) A obra Mona Lisa: a) teve todos os seus segredos interpretados pela alta tecnologia computacional, aliada à fotografia. b) é considerada a mais representativa do século XVI, de acordo com o fotógrafo francês Pascal Cotte. c) é a obra-prima de Leonardo da Vinci, mas ainda não se sabe se foi ele mesmo que a pintou. d) representa uma mulher que, segundo se acredita- va, foi pintada sem cílios nem sobrancelhas. e) teve seu sorriso misterioso desvendado pelo uso da tecnologia de alta definição. 7. (PUC-SP) Pascal Cotte: a) cuidadosamente descascou as camadas de tinta reto- cada de Mona Lisa para chegar à representação original. b) fotografou Mona Lisa fora de sua proteção de vi- dro, com uma câmera de alta tecnologia. c) levou Mona Lisa para uma exposição em São Fran- cisco, juntamente com suas fotografias. d) descobriu que Mona Lisa foi pintada com a ajuda de alunos de Leonardo da Vinci e que suas mãos es- tavam inacabadas. e) aplicou uma forte iluminação de raios infraverme- lhos para avaliar a qualidade dos pigmentosque Leo- nardo da Vinci usou. 8. (PUC) No trecho do primeiro parágrafo “The lady does indeed have eyebrows”, a expressão does indeed indica: a) contradição. b) ênfase. c) restrição. d) interrogação. e) hipótese. 9. (PUC) No trecho do quarto parágrafo do texto – In the process of photographing and scanning the images, Cotte discovered that the “Mona Lisa’s” eyebrows and eyelashes were originally painted on the piece. – a ex- pressão the piece refere-se a: a) eyebrows and eyelashes. b) images. 47 c) oil and pigment. d) photographing. e) Mona Lisa. 10. (PUC) Por meio das fotografias de Pascal Cotte des- cobriu-se que: a) Mona Lisa foi apedrejada em 1956 e sofreu reto- ques nos danos. b) os pigmentos usados por Leonardo da Vinci eram oleosos e de tons esfumaçados. c) os dedos de Mona Lisa foram retocados para recu- perar a posição original. d) a expressão característica de Mona Lisa con- tinua a ser um mistério. e) Mona Lisa foi pintada em uma determinada sequência. A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. Write the right form of the verbs below in the third person singular. Follow the models. Model: asks (to ask) answers (to answer) a) ____________ (talk) b) ____________ (play) c) ____________ (stay) d) ____________ (pass) e) ____________ (need) f) ____________ (take) g) ____________ (mix) h) ____________ (echo) i) ____________ (watch) j) ____________ (wash) 2. Using the words in parentheses, complete the text below with the appropriate tenses. You can use sim- ple present or present continuous. Follow the models: Model 1: Where is Sally? She (to watch) is watching a movie in bed. Model 2: What does she do for a living? She (to write) writes travelbooks a) Every Monday. Sarah (drive) ________________ her kids to football practice. b) Usually, I (work)____________=___________ ___ as a secretary at IBM, but this summer I (study) ________________ French at a language school in Lion. That is why I am in Lion. c) Shhhhh!Be quiet! Joseph (sleep) ___________ _______________. d) Don’t forget to take your umbrella. It (rain)______ __________________. e) I hate living in Seattle because it (rain, always) ________________. f) I’m sorry I can’t hear what you (say)_________ __________________ because everybody (talk) ________________ so loudly. g) Laurence (write, currently) ______________ a book about his adventures in Thayland. I hope he can find a good publisher when he is finished. h) John: Do you want to come over for dinner tonight? Sarah: Oh, I’m sorry, I can’t. I (go) _________ to a movie tonight with some friends. i) The business cards (be, normally) ______________ printed by a company in Cardiff. Their prices (be) _______________ inexpensive, yet the quality of their work is quite good. j) This delicious chocolate (be) _________________ made by a small chocolatier in Geneve, Switzerland. 3. Write the interrogative form of the sentences a-l below. a) The countries are among the best to… b) Brazil is among the best countries to… c) A good gadget relies on good software. d) Good gadgets rely on good software. e) There is only one device that… f) There are many devices that… g) Colombia can start a process which… h) The UK could start a process that… i) The actual CEO’s might opt for a new… j) New CEO’s may opt for an old approach. k) Members should consider offers… l) Representatives must consider new proposals. Interrogative a) ____________________________________ b) ____________________________________ c) ____________________________________ d) ____________________________________ e) ____________________________________ f) ____________________________________ g) ____________________________________ h) ____________________________________ i) ____________________________________ j) ____________________________________ k) ____________________________________ l) ____________________________________ 4. Write the negative form of the sentences a-l above. Negative a) ____________________________________ b) ____________________________________ c) ____________________________________ d) ____________________________________ e) ____________________________________ f) ____________________________________ g) ____________________________________ h) ____________________________________ i) ____________________________________ j) ____________________________________ k) ____________________________________ l) ____________________________________ 5. Write the interrogative-negative form of the senteces a-l above. Interrogative Negative a) ____________________________________ 48 b) ____________________________________ c) ____________________________________ d) ____________________________________ e) ____________________________________ f) ____________________________________ g) ____________________________________ h) ____________________________________ i) ____________________________________ j) ____________________________________ k) ____________________________________ l) ____________________________________ Gabarito Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. D 2. A 3. A 4. C 5. C 6. E 7. A 8. D 9. B 10. A A.P.A. Fixação 1. B 2. C 3. A 4. A 5. E 6. A 7. D 8. C 9. 02 + 08 = 10 10. A A.P.A. Complementar 1. C 2. E 3. A 4. B 5. D 6. D 7. B 8. B 9. E 10. E A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. a) talks b) plays c) stays d) passes e) needs f) takes g) mixes h) echoes i) watches j) washes 2. a) drives b) work - am studying c) is sleeping d) is raining e) always rains f) are saying - is talking g) is currently writing h) am going i) are normally printed - are j) is made 3. Interrogative a) Are the countries among the best to… b) Is Brazil among the best countries to… c) Does good gadget rely on good software… d) Do good gadgets rely on good softwares… e) Is there only one device that… f) Are there many devices that… g) Can Colombia start a process which… h) Could the UK start a process that… i) May the actual CEO’s opt for a new… j) May new CEO’s opt for an old approach. k) Should members consider offers… l) Must representatives consider new proposals… 4. Negative a) The countries aren’t among the best to… b) Brazil isn’t among the best countries to… c) A good gadget doesn’t rely on good software. d) Good gadgets don’t rely on good softwares. e) There isn’t only one device that… f) There aren’t many devices that… g) Colombia cannot (can’t) start a process which… h) The UK couldn’t start a process that… i) The actual CEO’s might not opt for a new… j) New CEO’s may not opt for an old approach. k) Members shouldn’t consider offers… l) Representatives mustn’t consider new proposals. 5. Interrogative-Negative a) Aren’t the countries among the best to…? b) Isn’t Brazil among the best countries to…? c) Doesn’t a good gadget rely on good software…? d) Don’t good gadgets rely on good softwares…? e) Isn’t there only one device that…? f) Aren’t there many devices that…? g) Can’t Colombia start a process which…? h) Couldn’t the UK start a process that…? i) May the actual CEO’s not opt for a new…? j) May new CEO’s not opt for an old approach. ? k) Shouldn’t members consider offers…? l) Mustn’t representatives consider new proposals…? 49 O objetivo desta unidade é fazer uma coletânea das formas verbais da língua inglesa que, de um jeito ou de outro, são compreendidas como formas verbais dos tempos passados do português. Vários tempos e formas verbais da língua inglesa, após uma pequena alteração de seu significado enquanto se realiza a leitura, "vem" para o leitor como se estivessem no passado em português, independentemente de como são chamados em inglês. Logo, a aproximação aqui proposta sugere o agrupamento dessas formas e tem- pos verbais do inglês. São elas: simple past, to be, there to be e o modal verb can. 1. Simple past (regra geral) A maior parte dos verbos em inglês atende às regras apre- sentadas neste item, portanto muita atenção. Quandose trata de simple past, os verbos da língua inglesa se des- dobram em duas categorias: verbos regulares e verbos irregulares. FONTE: YOUTUBE SIMPLE PAST | Passado Simples F Y multimídia: vídeo 2. Regular verbs (verbos regulares) Os verbos regulares são os "queridinhos"dos alunos bra- sileiros por se configurarem de forma mais simples. Para obter o passado dos verbos regulares, basta acrescentar o sufixo ED ou, às vezes, IED a sua base form (infinitivo sem a partícula to), independente de quem seja o sujeito. Observe os exemplos a seguir: to need (precisar, necessitar) I needed to be smarter. (Eu precisei ser mais in- teligente.) You needed to be smarter. (Você precisou ser mais inteligente.) He needed to be smater. (Ele precisou ser mais inteligente) She needed to be more careful. (Ela precisou ser mais cuidadosa.) It needed to be practical. (Isto precisava ser mais prático.) We needed to be more practical. (Nós precisa- mos ser mais práticos(as).) You needed to be more practical. (Vocês precisa- ram ser mais práticos) They needed to be more practical. (Elas(es) preci- saram ser mais práticos(as).) Quando um verbo termina em -y, deve-se prestar atenção na letra que antecede o -y, assim como antes de se colocar -s no presente simples. Caso o verbo termine em -y precedido de vogal, deve- se colocar o ED. Já caso o -y seja precedido de consoante, retira-se a letra y e coloca-se IED. Veja o exemplo abaixo: She played the guitar very well because she studied for many years. (Ela tocava violão muito bem pois estudou por muitos anos). 3. Irregular verbs (verbos irregulares) Encarar os verbos irregulares talvez seja o maior desafio para o estudante brasileiro quando se depara com o simple past FOCUS ON THE PAST HABILIDADES: 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 22, 23, 28 e 29 COMPETÊNCIAS: 1, 2, 7 e 9 CLASS 5 50 to go You didn’t go to Jake's birthday yesterday. (Vo- cês não foram para o aniversário do Jake ontem.) We didn’t go to work toguether. (Nós não fomos para o trabalho juntos.) 3.2. Formas interrogativas Para se verter uma frase para a forma interrogativa quan- do um verbo está no simple past, é preciso acrescentar o verbo auxiliar did antes do sujeito da oração. Observe, mais uma vez, que o verbo principal deve permanecer na base form (infinitivo sem to). Veja os exemplos a seguir: Exemplos: Did you need to be more careful? (Você precisou ser mais cuidadoso(a)?) Did she took the subway to work? (Ela pegou o metrô para o trabalho?) Did they go home early? (Elas foram cedo para casa?) 4. To be O verbo to be tem duas formas de passado: was (I, he, she, it) e were (you, we, they). Observe os exemplos: I was at work yesterday. (Eu estava no trabalho ontem). You were at home yesterday. (Você estava em casa ontem.) He was an French singer. (Ele era um cantor francês.) She was an Spanish doctor. (Ela era uma médica espanhola) The bike (it) was here four hours ago. (A bicicleta estava aqui há quatro horas atrás.) We were busy yesterday. (Nós estávamos ocupados(as) ontem.) They were bought in Russia in 2019. (Eles foram comprados na Rússia em 2019.) 4.1. Formas interrogativas Para chegar às formas interrogativas de passado do verbo to be, deve-se trocar a posição do verbo com o sujeito da oração. Veja alguns exemplos. da língua inglesa. Nesse aspecto, a língua inglesa se parece com a portuguesa, apresentando formas verbais variadas (daí o termo irregular), e, assim como para aprender o por- tuguês, também se torna necessário memorizar tais formas. Entretanto, tenha em mente que há apenas uma forma de passado para cada verbo, independente do sujeito. Seguem- -se apenas alguns exemplos. (Uma tabela de verbos irregu- lares está inserida no término desta unidade.) to take – took (past) I took the subway to work. (Eu peguei o metrô para trabalhar) She took the subway to work. (Ela pegou o me- trô para o trabalho) We took the subway to work. (Nós tomamos o metrô para o trabalho) to go – went (past) You went to school. (Você foi para a escola) He went too far. (Ele foi longe demais.) They went home together. (Eles foram juntos para casa) to eat – ate (past) I ate the whole pizza (Eu comi a pizza inteira) The dog ate our food (O cachorro comeu a nos- sa comida) We ate pasta toguether (Nós comemos macar- rão juntos) 3.1. Formas negativas Para chegar às formas negativas dos verbos no simple past, é preciso acrescentar, após o sujeito e antes do verbo prin- cipal, o verbo auxiliar did mais a partícula not, independen- te do verbo ser regular ou irregular. Como, mais uma vez, está sendo inserido um verbo auxiliar, é ele que "vai pro passado" no lugar do verbo principal, que permanece na base form. Observe os exemplos: to need I did not (didn’t) need to be more charismatic than usual. (Eu não precisei ser mais carismática do que de costume.) He didn’t (did not) need to be more skilful. (Ele não precisou ser mais habilidoso) to take I didn’t take the bus. (Eu não peguei o ônibus) They didn’t take the subway. (Eles(as) não pega- ram o metrô). 51 Exemplos: Were you at home yesterday? (Você estava em casa ontem?) Was it here four hours ago? (Aquilo/isso estava aqui há quatro horas?) Were they bought in Russia in 2019? (Eles foram comprados na Rússia em 2019?) 4.2. Formas negativas Para chegar às formas negativas do verbo to be no passa- do, deve-se inserir a palavra not após o verbo. Observe as contrações possíveis. I was not (wasn’t) at home yesterday. (Eu não estava em casa ontem). You were not (weren’t)at work yesterday. (Vocês não estavam no trabalho ontem.) He wasn’t an French singer. (Ele não foi um cantor francês.) 5. There to be Assim como no presente, duas formas de passado para o verbo there to be se apresentam: there was (para passa- do singular) e there were (para passado plural). Veja os exemplos a seguir. There was a restaurant near here. (Havia/existia um restaurante perto daqui.) There were many restaurants here. (Havia/existiam muitos restaurantes perto daqui.) 5.1. Formas negativas Para chegar às formas negativas de passado do there to be, é preciso acrescentar a palavra not às formas afirmativas. Veja os exemplos: There was not (wasn’t) any restaurant near here. (Não havia/existia um restaurante per- to daqui.) There were not (weren’t) many restaurants here. (Não havia/existiam muitos restaurantes perto daqui.) 5.2. Formas interrogativas Ao trocar a posição da forma verbal was ou were com o pronome there, obtém-se a forma interrogativa do verbo there to be. Veja os exemplos: Was there a person waiting here? (Havia/exis- tia uma pessoa esperando aqui?) Were there some people waiting here? (Ha- via/existiam algumas pessoas esperando aqui?) 6. Can Os modal verbs serão tratados de forma separada em uma unidade específica, mas, para que você já tenha um auxí- lio para sua leitura, seria importante que soubesse que o verbo can tem todas as suas formas de passado (incluídas as de subjuntivo) concentradas na palavra could com qual- quer que seja o sujeito envolvido. Sophia could play sing very well when she was a child. (Sophia podia cantar muito bem quando ela era criança.) Two years ago we could buy a car, but today this is impossible. (Há dois anos nós podíamos com- prar um carro, mas hoje isso é impossível.) I would go home if I could. (Eu iria para casa se eu pudesse.) 7. Used to Ao se deparar com textos em língua inglesa, o aluno sem- pre lida com um problema comum de quem tem o portu- guês como língua materna: as formas de passado do inglês são correspondentes nossos verbos do pretérito perfeito ou do pretérito imperfeito? Como devo entender uma frase como "I played very well"? "Eu joguei muito bem" ou "Eu jogava muito bem"? FONTE: YOUTUBE Inglês - Used To F Y multimídia: vídeo As frases grafadas em simple past em inglês usualmen- te correspondem ao que é nomeado em português como pretérito perfeito (ex: joguei, comi, bebi). Parase obter o mesmo significado das sentenças em português no pretéri- to imperfeito (ex: jogava, comia, bebia), a língua inglesa faz uso da estrutura used to. Em linhas gerais, ela é utilizada para expressar uma ação que era verdadeira no passado, mas que não é mais. Observe os exemplos: 52 I used to play basketball very well. (Eu costuma- va jogar/jogava basquete muito bem) She used to be a great singer. (Ela era/costu- mava ser uma grande cantora) Did you use to travel to the country when you lived abroad? (Você costumava viajar/viajava para o interior quando você morou no exterior?) I didn’t use to like it, but now I do. (Eu não cos- tumava gostar disso, mas agora eu gosto) FONTE: YOUTUBE Used To Love Her - Guns N' Roses Lyrics F Y multimídia: música 8. Past continuous Muito parecido com o caso previamente apresentado do present continuous, o past continuous da língua inglesa é um tempo verbal utilizado para expressar uma ação que estava acontecendo simultaneamente a outra no passado e é formado por uma forma de passado do verbo to be (was ou were) mais um outro verbo de ação acrescido do sufixo ING (gerund). Estude os exemplos: When you called, I was taking a shower. (Quan- do você ligou eu estava tomando banho) Were you sleeping when I called you yester- day? (Você estava dormindo quando eu te liguei ontem?) She wasn’t paying attention when the tea- cher assigned her homework. (Ela não estava prestando atenção quando o professor pas- sou a lição de casa.) Apêndice #1: formas interrogativo-negativas As diversar formas verbais abordadas nesta unidade (sim- ple past, to be, there to be e can) mostram, além das for- mas apresentadas (afirmativa, negativa e interrogativa), uma quarta forma: a interrogativo-negativa. As formas interrogativo-negativas são obtidas a partir das formas ne- gativas, cada um dos verbos seguindo suas próprias regras. Estude os exemplos a seguir: Didn’t they like their new clothes? (Eles(as) não gostaram de suas novas roupas?) FONTE: YOUTUBE Learn English ESL Irregular Verbs Grammar Rap Song! StickStuckStuck with Fluency MC! F Y multimídia: vídeo Didn’t you talk to him? (Você não conversou com eles?) Weren’t you at home yesterday? (Você não es- tava em casa ontem?) Wasn’t there a person waiting here? (Não havia uma pessoa esperando aqui?) Couldn’t you ride bicycles when you were 6? (Você não conseguia andar de bicicleta quando você tinha 6 anos de idade?) Calvin and Hobbes - Tenth Anniversary Book Livro de tirinhas em inglês do autor favorito dos exames vestibulares, familiarize-se com a linguagem coloquial pedida nesse tipo de questão. multimídia: livro Apêndice #2: Uso enfático do auxiliar did Além das formas interrogativas e negativas, há outro uso para o auxiliar did: o enfático. Tal como no presente sim- ples, é o verbo auxiliar que carrega o fardo da flexão de tempo, com o verbo principal se mantendo na base form. Veja os exemplos a seguir. I liked the show (Eu gostei do show) – I did like the show (Eu gostei muito do show) She told you not to be mad (Ela lhe pediu que não se chateasse) – She did tell you not to be mas (Ela realmente lhe pediu/foi muito clara ao lhe pedir que não se chateasse.) 53 Apêndice #3: Tabela dos 150 verbos mais comuns da língua inglesa (regulares e irregulares). A segunda coluna apresenta as formas de passado desses verbos, e a terceira coluna as formas de particípio passado (past participle). infinitive simple past past participle tradução do infinitivo 1. be was/were been ser, estar 2. have had had ter 3. do did done fazer 4. say said said dizer, falar 5. get got got, gotten conseguir, obter 6. make made made fazer 7. go went gone ir 8. see saw seen ver 9. know knew known saber, conhecer 10. take took taken tomar, pegar 11. think thought thought pensar, achar 12. come came come vir 13. give gave given dar 14. look looked looked olhar 15. use used used usar, utilizar 16. find found found encontrar,descobrir 17. want wanted wanted querer, procurar 18. tell told told dizer 19. put put put pôr, colocar 20. mean meant meant significar,que- rer dizer 21. become became become tornar-se 22. leave left left partir, sair 23. work worked worked trabalhar 24. need needed needed precisar,necessitar 25. feel felt felt sentir 26. seem seemed seemed parecer 27. ask asked asked perguntar, pedir 28. show showed showed, shown mostrar,de- monstrar 29. try tried tried tentar 30. call called called chamar, ligar 31. keep kept kept manter, continuar 32. provide provided provided fornecer, prover 33. hold held held segurar, conter 34. turn turned turned virar, mudar 35. follow followed followed seguir 36. begin began begun iniciar, começar 37. bring brought brought trazer 38. like liked liked gostar 39. forget forgot forgotten esquecer 40. help helped helped ajudar 41. start started started começar 42. run ran run correr, administrar 43. write wrote written escrever 44. set set set preparar, arrumar infinitive simple past past participle tradução do infinitivo 45. move moved moved mover, mudar 46. play played played jogar, brincar, tocar, executar 47. pay paid paid pagar 48. hear heard heard ouvir, escutar 49. include included included incluir 50. believe believed believed acreditar 51. allow allowed allowed permitir 52. meet met met encontrar,conhecer 53. lead led led levar,condu- zir, liderar 54. live lived lived viver, morar 55. stand stood stood levantar 56. happen happened happened acontecer, ocorrer 57. carry carried carried carregar 58. talk talked talked conversar 59. appear appeared appeared aparecer 60. produce produced produced produzir 61. sit sat sat sentar 62. offer offered offered oferecer 63. consider considered considered considerar 64. expect expected expected esperar, ter expectativa 65. suggest suggested suggested sugerir 66. let let let deixar, permitir 67. read read read ler 68. require required required requerer 69. continue continued continued continuar 70. lose lost lost perder 71. add added added adicionar 72. change changed changed mudar 73. fall fell fallen cair 74. remain remained remained permanecer,re- manecer 75. remember remembered remembered lembrar 76. buy bought bought comprar 77. speak spoke spoken falar, conversar 78. stop stopped stopped parar 79. send sent sent enviar, mandar 80. receive received received receber 81. decide decided decided decidir 82. win won won ganhar, vencer 83.understand understood understood entender,com- preender 84. describe described described descrever 85. develop developed developed desenvolver 86. agree agreed agreed concordar 87. open opened opened abrir 88. reach reached reached alcançar 89. build built built construir 90. involve involved involved envolver 54 9. Treating autism Gut bacteria may offer a treatment for autism A common probiotic holds the key HTTPS://WWW.ECONOMIST.COM/SCIENCE-AND-TECHNOLOGY/2018/12/08/ GUT-BACTERIA-MAY-OFFER-A-TREATMENT-FOR-AUTISM Autism affects people’s social behaviour and communica- tion, and may impair their ability to learn things. All this is well known. Less familiar to most, though, are the gas- trointestinal problems associated with the condition. The intestines of children with autism often harbour bacteria different from those in the guts of the neurotypical. As a consequence, such people are more than three times as likely as others are to develop serious alimentary-canal di- sorders at some point in their lives. Unfortunate though this is, the upset gut floras of autistic people are seen by some investigators as the key to the condition—and to treating it. Recent research has shown that altering animals’ intestinal bacteria can have drama- tic effects on their nervous systems. Ameliorating autism by tinkering with the ecology of the gut might thus be a fruitful line of inquiry. A study just published in Neuron suggests that it is. In it, Mauro Costa-Mattioliof Baylor College of Medicine, in Texas, and his colleagues demonstrate that introducing a particular bacterium into the guts of mice that display au- tistic symptoms can abolish some of those symptoms. The infinitive simple past past participle tradução do infinitivo 91. spend spent spent gastar, passar o tempo 92. return returned returned retornar 93. draw drew drawn desenhar,retirar, empatar 94. die died died morrer 95. hope hoped hoped esperar, ter esperança 96. create created created criar 97. walk walked walked caminhar, andar 98. sell sold sold vender 99. wait waited waited esperar 100. cause caused caused causar 101. pass passed passed passar 102. lie lied lied mentir 103. accept accepted accepted aceitar 104. watch watched watched assistir 105. raise raised raised elevar, aumentar 106. base based based basear 107. apply applied applied aplicar 108. break broke broken quebrar,in- terromper 109. explain explained explained explicar 110. learn iearned/learnt learned, learnt aprender 111. increase increased increased aumentar, incrementar 112. cover covered covered cobrir 113. grow grew grown crescer, desenvolver 114. claim claimed claimed alegar, afirmar, clamar 115. report reported reported reportar, descrever 116. support supported supported apoiar, dar suporte 117. cut cut cut cortar 118. form formed formed formar 119. stay stayed stayed ficar, permanecer 120. contain contained contained conter 121. reduce reduced reduced reduzir 122. establish established established estabelecer 123. join joined joined juntar, juntar-se 124. wish wished wished desejar 125. achieve achieved achieved alcançar, conquistar 126. seek sought sought procurar 127. choose chose chosen escolher 128. deal dealt dealt lidar, negociar 129. face faced faced encarar, enfrentar 130. fail failed failed falhar 131. serve served served servir 132. end ended ended terminar 133. kill killed killed matar 134. occur occurred occurred ocorrer infinitive simple past past participle tradução do infinitivo 135. drive drove driven dirigir, conduzir 136. represent represented represented representar 137. rise rose risen levantar, aumentar 138. discuss discussed discussed discutir, dialogar 139. love loved loved amar, adorar 140. pick picked picked pegar, escolher 141. place placed placed colocar, pôr 142. argue arqued argued discutir 143. prove proved proved provar 144. wear wore worn vestir 145. catch caught caught pegar, apanhar 146. enjoy enjoyed enjoyed usufruir, curtir 147. eat ate eaten comer 148.introduce introduced introduced introduzir, apresentar 149. enter entered entered entrar 150. present presented presented apresentar 55 bug in question is Lactobacillus reuteri. It is commonly fou- nd in healthy digestive systems and helps regulate acidity levels. And it is also easily obtainable for use as a probiotic from health-food shops. Mens sana in corpore sano Dr Costa-Mattioli and his team first reported L. reuteri’s effects on autism in 2016, after conducting experiments with obese female mice. These animals have a tendency to give birth to offspring with autistic traits familiar from people—unwillingness to socialise, repetitive behaviour and unwillingness to communicate (in the case of mice, via ultrasonic squeaking). The researchers noted that the guts of both the obese mothers and their young were bereft of L. reuteri. They wondered what effect transplant- ing these bugs into the animals might have. They found, when they did so to the offspring, that the youngsters’ autism-like traits vanished. That led to the latest experiments, on mice that have au- tistic symptoms induced in four other, different ways. Some were genetically edited to be autistic. Some were exposed to valproic acid, a drug used to treat bipolar disorder and migraines that is known to induce autism in fetuses. Some had their guts cleared of all bacteria. And some belonged to a strain called btbr, individuals of which display autism-like traits that have no known cause. Martina Sgritta, one of Dr Costa-Mattioli’s colleagues, an- alysed the bacteria in the guts of all of these animals. She found that, while the genetically engineered mice and the btbr mice had, as expected, reduced levels of L. reuteri, and those with bacteria-free guts were (obviously) free of the bug altogether, the valproic-acid mice had normal amounts of the bacterium. This last result was unexpected, but the team carried on re- gardless. They arranged for between seven and 15 mice of each of the four types to have, starting at the age of three weeks, their drinking water laced with L. reuteri. Equivalent numbers of each type continued to be given ordinary water as a control. During the course of the experiment the mice had their faeces collected regularly, so that their bacteria could be tracked. And, at the age of seven weeks, they were given two sorts of social tests. The first test involved putting each experimental mouse into a perspex container from which it could go either into a chamber where there was an empty wire cup or into one where there was a similar cup containing an unfamiliar mouse. Subject mice were left in the container for ten min- utes and were monitored to see how long they spent with the empty cup and with the other mouse. The second test placed a mouse in an arena where an- other, unfamiliar mouse was already present. An observer, who did not know which mice were controls and which had been given L. reuteri in their water, then noted how often over the course of ten minutes the two mice touched, sniffed, groomed and crawled on one another. In both tests, all the mice that had had their water laced with L. reuteri, regardless of how their autism had been induced, were more sociable than equivalents that had been drinking unlaced water. In the first, they spent twice as much time with the mouse under the wire cup. In the second, they engaged in many more social interactions with the unfamiliar mouse. The team’s initial hypothesis had been that the supplemen- tary L. reuteriwere somehow changing the gut flora of the mice exposed to them into something more normal. But they weren’t. Indeed, L. reuteri proved able to abolish autis- tic behaviour even in those mice which had guts otherwise devoid of microbes—as well as in those with valproic-aci- d-induced autism, which already had normal levels of the bug. That suggests boosting levels of this bacterial species is shaping behaviour all by itself. Their next hypothesis was that the bacterium was doing this by interacting somehow with oxytocin, a hormone that sha- pes behaviour and plays a part in the ways in which people and other mammals form social bonds. Dr Costa-Mattioli knew from work published in 2013 that spraying oxytocin into the noses of mice with autistic symptoms helps to ame- liorate some of those symptoms. Dr Sgritta therefore ran the experiments again, but this time on autistic mice that had had the oxytocin receptors on the relevant neurons disabled by genetic engineering. In these new experiments, the pre- sence of L. reuter in drinking water had no effect. Follow-up examinations of the mice in all these experiments looked at the strengths of connections between nerve cells within part of the brain called the ventral tegmental region. This region regulates, among other things, motivation and reward-related social behaviour. Nerve signals are carried by the movement of ions (electrically charged atoms), so the team were able to measure connection-strength by moni- toring the flow of ions at the junctions between nerve cells in this region. Strong connections, with lots of ion flow, in- dicated that social experiences were rewarding. These were normal in the mice exposed to L. reuteri, which makes sense since animals treated with the bacterium sought out more social experiences. Conversely, weak connections (those with little ion flow)indicated that social experiences were not tri- ggering a reward. Such weak connections were found in ani- mals that had not been exposed to the bacterium. 56 FONTE: YOUTUBE Lynyrd Skynyrd - Born to Run F Y multimídia: música The researchers suspected that such effects were con- trolled by signals from the gut that are being transmitted by the vagus nerve, which connects gut and brain. To test this idea they cut that nerve in selected animals. In these animals, subsequent treatment with L. reuteri failed to abolish their autistic symptoms. The crucial aspect of this work is L. reuteri’s wide availabili- ty—an availability approved by regulators such as America’s Food and Drug Administration. This existing approval, which means L. reuterI poses no known health hazard, simplifies the process of organising clinical trials. Clearly, autism in people is more complicated than a mere willingness to associate with others. And getting too excit- ed about a mouse trial is usually a mistake. But in Dr Cos- ta-Mattioli’s view his results, which have been replicated in part by Evan Elliot’s laboratory in Bar-Ilan University, Israel, would justify embarking on at least preliminary trials in- tended to determine whether L. reuteri has positive effects on people with autism, and might thus be worth pursuing. Others agree. Sarkis Mazmanian of the California Institute of Technology works in the same area. He says of these results: “I think the bar is now very low for getting this re- search moved on to human trials since most people already have these bacteria inside them and we know there are few, if any, safety or toxicity issues.” The general availability of L. reuter does, however, bring with it another possibility—that people will conduct their own, “off label” trials, either on themselves or on their children. Dr Mazmanian is cautious about that idea. “I don’t know if there is a barrier to people buying and using this stuff now. It may be strain-specific and the paper does not state which strain or strains were used,” he says. At the moment, Dr Costa-Mattioli is unwilling to divulge that information. He is expecting to publish another paper soon, though, with more details. In practice, it may be hard to dis- courage people from testing L. reuteri’s effects themselves. All the more reason to do properly conducted trials quickly. Vocabulary: impair: prejudicar; enfraquecer harbour: abrigo guts: entranhas ameliorating:melhorar; aperfeiçoar tinkering: brincar; mexer offspring: prole; geração vanished: destruído; arrasado tracked: traçado; monitorado FONTE: YOUTUBE Adele - Set Fire To The Rain F Y multimídia: música 57 Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. (Unesp) Assinale a alternativa correta: _____ he do the work last night? a) Do b) Does c) Have d) Has e) Did 2. (Unesp) Assinale a alternativa que preenche correta- mente a lacuna da frase a seguir: Can you tell me where __________ my bike yesterday? a) did you leave b) you left c) you have left d) you leaved e) did you left 3. (Unesp) Assinale a alternativa que preenche a lacuna da frase a seguir corretamente: The mayor __________ it difficult to refuse. a) find b) finding c) founded d) found e) to find 4. Assinale a alternativa que preenche corretamente a lacuna da frase a seguir: Hey, take it easy! I __________ to fool you. a) weren’t trying b) wasn’t trying c) wasn’t try d) wasn’t tried e) didn’t trying 5. (Uel) When I asked Jim if he liked his job he replied that he _____. a) did b) does c) do d) doing e) has done 6. Assinale a alternativa que preenche corretamente a lacuna da frase a seguir: Tell me, why _____ you so angry? a) was b) wasn’t c) were d) did be e) didn’t 7. A forma negativa da frase “He tore the page of the book” é: a) He tore not the page of the book. b) He doesn’t tear the page of the book. c) He didn’t tore the page of the book. d) He didn’t tear the page of the book. e) He did tore not the page of the book. 8. A frase “She put it on that big shelf” pode ser uma resposta à pergunta: a) Where does she put her cook book? b) Where did she puts her cook book? c) Where does she puts her cook book? d) Where did she put her cook book? e) Where didn’t she put her cook book? 9. A forma interrogativa negativa da frase “Otto was a great student” é: a) Was it Otto a great student? b) Wasn’t Otto a great student? c) Were Otto a great student? d) Did Otto is a great student? e) Did Otto be a great student? 10. Valéria __________ that her husband’s friends __________ for dinner. a) doesn’t know – were coming b) didn’t know – was coming c) didn’t know – wasn’t coming d) didn’t knew – were coming e) didn’t know – were coming A.P.A. Fixação TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 6 QUESTÕES. In 1960s America there was a “white flight” to the suburbs, which provoked a deterioration of city centers. In the ‘70s and ‘80s the death of heavy industry emptied once proud cities like Manches- ter and Glasgow. Social and economic change has been wreaking chaos with cities for a long time, but each instance was usually thought of as an isolated event – or at least a regional disease. That’s no longer true. As birthrates in more and more countries de- cline, shrinking-city syndrome is becoming a worldwide crisis. Aging countries are getting hit the worst. In Russia a combination of very low birthrates, decreased life expectancy and the collapse of the communist era is affecting the country badly. Seven major Russian cities were shrinking in 1990; by 2000 the number had soared to 93. In Japan, hundreds of small and midsize cities are thinning out. Even in China, the low birthrate means that coastal megacities like Shanghai are growing at the expense of dozens of less successful metropolises. Today, while hundreds of millions of Asians and Africans are just starting to move to cities, one quarter of the world’s centers are declining in population – twice the number a decade ago. Wouldn’t less-crowded cities be a good thing? Definitely not, ac- cording to “Shrinking Cities”, a new exhibit in Berlin that compares 58 city shrinkage across the world. In places like Detroit and Liverpool, shuttered stores and abandoned houses have led to increased vio- lence. A 50 percent drop in the birthrate has killed entire sectors of the economy in cities that used to be located in East Germany. (ADAPTADO DE NEWSWEEK, SEPTEMBER 27, 2004.) 1. (UFSCar) Nas décadas de 1970 e 1980: a) duas cidades britânicas pagaram com o esvazia- mento urbano pela perda de suas indústrias de base. b) orgulhosas cidades da Grã-Bretanha viram sua popula- ção aumentar devido à instalação de indústrias pesadas. c) a instalação de indústrias pesadas em cidades da Grã- -Bretanha provocou um esvaziamento da população. d) Manchester e Glasgow exibiam, com orgulho, uma taxa de crescimento diretamente ligado a um surto da indústria de base. e) duas cidades britânicas orgulhavam-se por ter con- seguido se livrar de suas indústrias de base. 2. (UFSCar) A Rússia: a) é tida como um país em rejuvenescimento, fato provo- cado, entre outras coisas, pela queda do comunismo. b) está conhecendo um envelhecimento populacional graças, entre outros fatores, ao colapso por que passa a indústria comunista. c) combina diferentes fatores para evitar que caia a taxa de expectativa de vida de sua população. d) conheceu, em sua era comunista, taxas de natalidade muito baixas, o que só agora está sendo contornado. e) é um país idoso, em que, entre outras coisas, se combina uma taxa de natalidade baixa e uma di- minuição da expectativa de vida. 3. (UFSCar) Segundo a mostra “Shrinking Cities”: a) o esvaziamento urbano, tal como o de Detroit e Liverpool, levou a um crescimento da violência. b) cidades como Detroit e Liverpool, devido a um aumen- to da violência, conheceram uma degradação urbana. c) fica comprovado que cidades menos populosas cons- tituem algo positivo, apesar da violência urbana. d) Berlim é uma cidade que, comoDetroit e Liverpool, exi- be casas abandonadas e lojas com vidraças quebradas. e) cidades com menos população, como as que se lo- calizavam na ex-Alemanha Oriental, conheceram um decréscimo da violência urbana. 4. (UFSCar) Na década de 1960: a) as cidades americanas encolheram porque os bran- cos deixaram de viver em seus subúrbios. b) houve um acentuado crescimento da população nas cidades americanas, o que provocou a deteriora- ção de seus centros. c) a população branca passou a procurar os subúrbios das cidades americanas para ali residir. d) os subúrbios de cidades americanas começaram a se deteriorar devido à procura da população branca por essas áreas. e) os centros e os subúrbios das cidades americanas começaram a se deteriorar. 5. (UFSCar) Segundo o texto: a) hoje não mais se acredita que as mudanças econô- micas e sociais sejam responsáveis pelo caos urbano. b) os problemas urbanos provocados por mudanças na economia e na sociedade eram vistos como um fenômeno mundial. c) o isolamento regional levava as cidades a conhecerem o caos provocado por mudanças econômicas e sociais. d) hoje não é mais tido como verdadeiro que o caos so- cial de origem econômica e social constitua algo isolado. e) o caos urbano ainda é tido como uma doença re- gional que, em cada caso, provoca um isolamento econômico e social. 6. (UFSCar) Na China: a) o crescimento de megacidades como Xangai expli- ca-se por sua localização junto à costa. b) Xangai, uma das megacidades do país, incentivou o crescimento de dezenas de outras metrópoles localiza- das junto à costa. c) dezenas de cidades tiveram menos sucesso que Xangai em termos econômicos, embora continuem a aumentar suas populações. d) Xangai, uma das doze megacidades do país, apresen- ta uma das maiores taxas de crescimento bem-sucedido. e) a expansão populacional de grandes cidades costei- ras como Xangai se deu à custa do esvaziamento de outras metrópoles. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 4 QUESTÕES BATTLING THE BLOODLINES It’s the small things the Brazilians do that annoy some Japanese in Toyota City. The immigrants don’t throw their garbage where they are supposed to. They gather outside and play loud music at night. They play a strange card game that involves yelling “Truco!” at the top of their lungs. To Japanese in one densely populated public housing complex, it feels as if the foreigners are closing in on them, the smoke from the barbecues suffoca- ting them, the Latin music drowning out an imagined tranqui- lity. Ten years ago there were 200 Brazilians in the complex. Today there are 3,500. “The sidewalks are getting narrower,” said a Japanese woman as she maneuvered a grocery cart through a gathering of Brazilian families. “There’s no room for us anymore,” said her friend. Foreigners of any stripe can be upsetting in Japan, where confor- mity is a national creed and wa, the concept of harmony, is inte- gral to maintaining stability and peace in a country of 126 million people crowded onto four islands. “I don’t think it’s a good idea to concentrate Brazilians in one place,” said Masae Matsui. Two years ago, a residents’ association Matsui headed proposed res- tricting the number of foreigners in his public housing complex; in April, he was elected to the city assembly. The dark side of “wa”, the part that excludes outsiders, erupted into violence earlier this summer in Toyota City, home to thousands of workers of the carmaker Toyota, its subsidiaries and suppliers. After a dispute with a noodle vendor got out of hand, about 100 supporters of a rightwing nationalist group paraded around the 59 public housing complex where 3,500 Brazilians live. They shouted through a loud-speaker, “Foreigners go home,” taunted the Brazi- lians to come out and fight and waved metal pipes in the air. TIME, AUGUST 9, 1999, P. 19. 7. (FEI) Segundo o texto, qual foi o fato concreto que deu origem às cenas de violência em Toyota City? a) Greve de milhares de trabalhadores, subsidiárias e fornecedores de Toyota. b) Incidente com um vendedor de macarrão. c) Limite de 200 moradores brasileiros por con junto habitacional. d) Uma briga de brasileiros com um grupo naciona- lista japonês. e) O fato de os brasileiros não compreenderem o wa, conceito de harmonia fundamental no Japão. 8. (FEI) O texto revela: a) grande estima que os japoneses têm pelos brasileiros. b) que os japoneses apreciam música latina. c) dificuldades de relacionamento entre imigrantes brasileiros e residentes japoneses. d) que as calçadas das cidades de Toyota são muito estreitas. e) que a população do Japão aumentou consideravel- mente nos últimos dez anos. 9. (FEI) “There’s no room for us anymore”(1o parágrafo). Qual é a melhor tradução? a) Não há mais espaço para nós. b) Perdemos o rumo para sempre. c) Não há mais quartos disponíveis. d) Não há companheiros de quartos para nós. e) Não temos mais direitos. 10. (FEI) Na expressão “The sidewalks are GETTING narrower” (1o parágrafo), você poderia substituir GETTING por: a) closing. b) having. c) beginning. d) coming. e) becoming. A.P.A. Complementar 1. Assinale a alternativa na qual todos os termos se carac- terizam como vocabulário específico da área legislativa. a) Across, approved, platform, ruling. b) Constitution, legislation, share, throughout. c) Across, allow, platform, rights. d) Constitution, entitled, rights, ruling. e) Across, extended, recognize, share. 2. Assinale a alternativa na qual todas as palavras são formas verbais relativas ao passado. a) Adopted, become, decided, recognized, ruled. b) Adopted, allow, become, recognized, ruled. c) Approved, became, been, decided, ruled. d) Allow, approved, became, decided, may. e) Can, debated, entitled, made, offered. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 3 QUESTÕES PHYSICIAN, HEAL THYSELF When the topic of medical errors comes up, people usually think of the most outrageous mistakes: the Florida doctor, for example, who amputated the wrong leg of his diabetic patient or the Colorado boy who died during ear surgery be- cause his anesthesiologist allegedly fell asleep. Though much publicized, these egregious errors are relatively rare. Far more common are mental lapses or simple slip-ups that sometimes lead to disaster. For instance, a harried doctor misdiagnoses a patient because he cannot spend more than five minutes examining her. Or a pharmacist dispenses the wrong drug because he misreads the doctor’s handwriting on the pres- cription. Last fall the national Academy of Science’s Institu- te of Medicine released a report entitled “To Err is Human,” which claimed that between 44,000 and 98,000 Americans die every year as a result of medical errors. Even the lower es- timate would make errors the eighth leading cause of death, striking down more people than motor vehicle accidents or breast cancer. The report outlined a series of recommenda- tions aimed at reducing medical errors by 50 percent over the next five years. It advocated an approach similar to that used by the aviation industry, with the focus on collecting information on errors and using this knowledge to devise sa- fer systems and procedures. President Bill Clinton has already endorsed the report, and Congress may act on several of its recommendations this year. (SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, MAY 2000.) 3. (UFPR) According to the text, it is correct to say: 01) Health professionals become outraged when the issue of medical errors emerges. 02) Surgeons make more mistakes than anesthesio- logists. 04) The difficulty in reading the physician’s handwri- ting on a prescription may lead a pharmacist to hand out the incorrect medication. 08) Anesthesiologists are responsible for most me- dical errors. 16) Doctors may make mistakes when they examine their patients in a hurry. 4. (UFPR) The text contains: 01) examples of medical errors that have received a lot of attention in the media. 02) data related to the number of lawsuits brought about by medical errors. 04) data relatedto the number of deaths caused by medical errors. 08) examples of problems that may result from minor errors on the part of health professionals. 60 16) data related to the social class of the victims of medical errors. 5. (UFPR) According to the text, it is correct to say: 01) The report “To Err is Human” is based on data from the last five years. 02) The report entitled “To Err is Human” contains recommendations on how to reduce the incidence of medical errors. 04) Due to the adoption of the report recommenda- tions, the number of medical errors has dropped 50%. 08) On the basis of the report, the American Congress has already passed new legislation intended to reduce the number of deaths resulting from medical errors. 16) The number of deaths due to medical errors is higher than the number of deaths resulting from mo- tor vehicle accidents. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 2 QUESTÕES One hundred billion pounds of food go to waste every year in America, while 35 million people remain hungry. The problem is not lack of food, but lack of communication −how to get food where it’s needed most. Resource Link.org is an hp-de- signed and operated e-service portal which connects food manufacturers with America’s Second Harvest, the country’s largest food relief agency. The system not only automatically locates surplus food, but dynamically interacts with shipping companies to get that food to the right place. A process whi- ch used to take weeks now takes minutes. This is the power of e-services − connecting companies and their services in inventive ways and, in some cases, maybe even making so- meone’s life a little better. WWW.RESOURCELINK.HP.COMPOSSIBILITIES MADE FRESH DAILY. E-SERVICES SOLUTIONS FROM HP. HEWLETT PACKARD 6. (UFPR) O objetivo do serviço prestado pelo portal ResourceLink.org é: 01) Reduzir o desperdício de alimentos. 02) Agilizar a entrega de alimentos para pessoas ne- cessitadas. 04) Melhorar os sistemas de armazenamento de al- imentos. 08) Evitar as perdas de produtos perecíveis durante o transporte. 16) Facilitar a compra de alimentos via internet. 7. (UFPR) According to the text, it is correct to say: 01) ResourceLink.org is the name of an organization that operates food manufacturing companies. 02) The ad attempts to show how easy it is to buy food on-line. 04) The ad stresses the fact that the best shipping companies use HP software in all their operations. 08) The ad attempts to show that HP is active in deal- ing with social problems. 16) The ad shows some of the possibilities of e-ser- vices solutions from HP. A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. Write the past form (simple past) of the verbs in the chart below. 2. Turn the following sentences into simple past. The first item has been done for you. a) Love can mend your heart. Love could mend your heart. b) Can love mend your heart? ______________________________________ c) There is a clear message in a bottle here. ______________________________________ d) There are some things love can do for you. ______________________________________ e) Does commerce rule the world? ______________________________________ f) Do commerce and finance rule the world? ______________________________________ g) Commerce rules the world. ______________________________________ h) Is terrorism a shadow over everyone’s head? ______________________________________ i) Terrorism and fear are a shadow over the USA. ______________________________________ j) Am I the only one here? ______________________________________ k) They do not come on Sundays. ______________________________________ l) They don’t like it at all. ______________________________________ m) She doesn’t see it that way. ______________________________________ O TEXTO A SEGUIR REFERE-SE ÀS QUESTÕES 3 A 5. (UFES adaptado) Punctuation hero’ branded a vandal for painting apostrophes on street signs After enduring sloppy punctuation on the street sign outside his home for more than a year, Stefan Gatward could stand it no 61 longer. The 62-year-old former soldier _(1)_ to launch a one-man crusade against ‘dumbed down’ Britain, and _(2)_ up a pain- tbrush to insert a missing apostrophe. This _(3)_ the incorrect St Johns Close into the correct St John’s Close. But he was immediately _(4)_ of being a vandal by one nei- ghbour, and his amendments have been _(5)_ off by others who apparently prefer the wrong version. The 62-year-old’s defence of the apostrophe comes after Bir- mingham council announced it would scrap the punctuation from council signs for the sake of ‘simplicity’. Mr Gatward _(6)_ into his flat in Tunbridge Wells, Kent, 14 months ago. He said today: ‘As we are off St John’s Road and opposite St John’s Church, both with the apostrophe, St John’s Close should have one too.’ But when Mr Gatward decided to correct the crime against the language by painting in the missing punctuation mark, he was jeered by a neighbour. ‘He _(7)_ me I was wrong. He _(8)_ me a vandal and a graffiti artist,’ Mr Gatward said. ‘He tried to tell me that the Post Office would not deliver to the street if you put in an apostrophe.’ Mr Gatward, who _(9)_ for four years in the Gordon Highlanders in the 1960s, is not just a campaigner for the apostrophe. He will not join the ‘five items or less’ queue at the supermarket, in protest that the sign should read ‘five items or fewer’. He also gets annoyed when people-neglect the ‘Royal’ in ‘Royal Tunbridge Wells’, and was vexed when he _(10)_ a major chain store advertising sales with signs saying ‘until stocks last’ rather than ‘while stocks last’. ‘I fought for the preservation of our heritage and our language but some people seem happy to let that go. I’m not,’ he said. (FERNANDEZ, COLIN. ‘PUNCTUATION HERO’ BRANDED A VANDAL FOR PAINTING APOSTROPHES ON STREET SIGNS. DISPONÍVEL EM: <HTTP://WWW.DAILYMAIL.CO.UK) 3. Fill in the blanks in the text above by using words from the box. Write your answers in the blanks found after the text. accused called decided moved picked saw scratched served told turned 1)____________________________________ 2)____________________________________ 3)____________________________________ 4)____________________________________ 5)____________________________________ 6)____________________________________ 7)____________________________________ 8)____________________________________ 9)____________________________________ 10)____________________________________ Responda às perguntas seguintes em português 4. O ex-soldado Stefan Gatward iniciou uma cruzada pes- soal contra algo que julgou errado em sua vizinhança. No que consiste essa cruzada? Qual foi a reação à iniciativa de Stefan Gatward de alguns dos moradores da rua dele? 5. A iniciativa mencionada no item anterior é a única na cruzada pessoal de Stefan Gatward? Justifique sua resposta com as informações do texto. Gabarito Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. E 2. B 3. D 4. B 5. A 6. C 7. D 8. D 9. B 10. E A.P.A. Fixação 1. A 2. E 3. A 4. C 5. D 6. E 7. B 8. C 9. A 10. E A.P.A. Complementar 1. D 2. C 3. 04 + 16 = 20 4. 01 + 04 + 08 = 13 5. 02 + 16 = 18 6. 01 + 02 = 03 7. 08 + 16 = 24 A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. Veja a tabela no fim deste livro. 2. a) Love could mend your heart. b) Could love mend your heart? c) There was a clear message in a bottle here. d) There were some things love could do for you. e) Did commerce rule the world? f) Did commerce and finance rule the world? g) Commerce ruled the world. h) Was terrorism a shadow over everyone’s head? i) Terrorism and fear were a shadow over the USA. j) Was I the only one here? k) They did not come on Sundays. l) They didn’t like it at all. m) She didn’t see it that way. 62 3. 1) Decided 2) Picked 3) Turned 4) Accused 5) Scratched 6) Moved 7) Told 8) Called 9) Served 10) Saw 4. De acordo com as informações do texto, Stefan Gatward, inconformado com a falta de apóstrofes nas placas da rua onde mora,tomou a iniciativa de ele mesmo fazer as corre- ções necessárias. Alguns dos vizinhos de Stefan mostraram- -se desfavoráveis à iniciatica dele. 5. Pintar as placas de sua rua não foi a única iniciativa de Stefan Gatward. Ele também se recusa a entrar em filas de supermercado cuja sinalização esteja errada, além de protestar contra erros gramaticais em anúncios de lojas. 63 1. Futuro - diferentes formas Em inglês, é possível se referir ao futuro de diferentes ma- neiras, uma vez que não há uma conjugação de futuro, como ocorre em português. Na língua inglesa o que existem são expressões que sig- nificam futuro, e cada uma delas representa o futuro de maneira diferente. É possível dizer, por exemplo: I think I will eat something. (Eu acho que vou comer alguma coisa) I am going to see a doctor tomorrow. (Eu vou ver um médico amanhã) Cada uma dessas maneiras de se falar uma frase no futuro é usada em situações específicas e tem suas próprias re- gras e restrições. 1.1. Will 1.1.1. Escrever o futuro com will A palavra will tem origem no idioma alemão e carrega o significado de "querer". (Ich will einen Film sehen - Eu quero ver um filme). Em inglês, ela indica a ideia de uma ação futura decidida pelo falante no momento em que diz a frase. Trata-se de uma oração futura que expressa a vontade do sujeito no momento, isto é, exprime uma decisão espontânea. It’s too hot here! I will open the windows. She said she will come to the party. Perceba que os verbos que são usados depois do verbo will vêm sempre na forma base. Isso deve ser sempre lembrado. Note também que, mesmo depois de ser utilizado com uma terceira pessoa do singular, o verbo will não ganha o -s. O verbo will é um verbo defectivo, isto é: não possui todas as formas de conjugação. Current Affairs - Inglês Prático: Vestibulares e Concursos Os autores Vasconcelos e Nash mostram técnicas de interpretação de 15 textos de forma prática e objetiva. multimídia: livro 1.1.2. Fazer previsões para o futuro com will. É possível utilizar o verbo will para falar sobre algo que se acredita que vai acontecer no futuro. Mesmo que não haja evidências ou comprovações, existe uma crença em relação ao que vai acontecer. I have a feeling it will rain tonight They said their team will win the big game this weekend. 1.1.3. Estrutura: Afirmativa: Sujeito + WILL + verbo (base form) Exemplos: I will buy a house. (Eu vou comprar uma casa.) She will forgive me someday. (Ela um dia vai me perdoar.) Those two countries will face a war. (Aqueles dois países vão encarar uma guerra.) Negativa: Sujeito + WILL NOT (WON’T) + verbo (base form) Exemplos: I will not (won’t) marry to her. (Eu não vou casar com ela) LOOKING FORWARD HABILIDADES: 2, 5, 6 e 28 COMPETÊNCIAS: 1, 2, e 9 CLASS 6 64 1.2. To be going to 1.2.1. Escrever o futuro com be going to A expressão be going to é uma locução verbal também utilizada para falar de futuro. Ela poderia ser traduzida lite- ralmente como "eu estou indo fazer". No entanto, ela não será traduzida dessa maneira aqui. A expressão be going to é usada sempre que se deseja falar sobre uma decisão que foi tomada e que se tornou uma intenção. They are going to get married in October. I am going to visit her tomorrow to give her the medication. He is going to watch a movie now, he is al- ready making the popcorn. Perceba que o verbo to be deve ser conjugado de acor- do com o sujeito da oração. No primeiro exemplo, é usado are; no terceiro, é usado is. Ambos, porém, continuam sen- do verbo to be. FONTE: YOUTUBE WILL e GOING TO | Como Diferenciar F Y multimídia: vídeo 1.2.2. Fazer previsões para o futuro com be going to A expressão be going to é usada quando se trata de uma previsão futura baseada em condições reais do presente ou evidências vistas no presente. Pauline is going to have a baby. Her passport is expired! She’s not going to be authorized to leave the country. 1.2.3. Estrutura Afirmativa: Sujeito + to be (present) + going to + verbo Exemplos: I am going to marry her. (Eu vou casar com ela.) She will never forgive me. (Ela nunca me perdoará) Those two countries will not (won’t) face a war. (Aqueles dois países não vão enfrentar uma guerra) 1.1.3.3. Interrogativa: WILL + Sujeito + verbo (base form) Exemplos: Will you marry her? (Você vai casar com ela?) Will she ever forgive you? (Ela algum dia vai te perdoar?) Will those two countries face a war? (Aqueles dois países enfrentarão uma guerra?) 1.1.4. Funcionalidade: Falar de decisões que foram tomadas ao longo da con- versa ou na hora em que foi necessário. Trata-se de um futuro mais “espontâneo” Fazer previsões sobre o futuro baseadas meramente no que você acredita que vai acontecer. Geralmente são utilizadas expressões como I think… e I believe… Observações: NUNCA utilize to antes ou depois do verbo auxiliar WILL. I will to help you. (incorrect) I will help you. (correct) NUNCA acrescente -s no verbo auxiliar WILL para as terceiras pessoas do singular she, he, it. She wills help you. (incorrect) She will helps you. (incorrect) She will help you. (correct) FONTE: YOUTUBE Future Tense - WILL & GOING TO F Y multimídia: vídeo 65 Is Laura going to live abroad? (Laura vai viver no exterior?) FONTE: YOUTUBE Meghan Trainor - Like I'm Gonna Lose You F Y multimídia: música 1.2.4. Funcionalidade: Falar sobre intenções futuras baseadas em decisões já tomadas e que estão sendo comunicadas no presente. Fazer previsões baseadas em evidências, sejam elas evidências do presente, sejam elas factuais. FONTE: YOUTUBE Queen - We Will Rock You F Y multimídia: música Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. (FEI) “I don’t think”. Coloque na forma afirmativa e no tempo futuro. a) I don’t think b) I am thinking c) I think d) I won’t think e) I’ll think 2. (Unesp) Assinale a alternativa que preenche correta- mente a lacuna da frase a seguir: He will _____ almost everything you ask him. a) do b) to do c) doing d) does e) did George is going to take your credibility into account. (George vai levar em conta sua credibilidade.) This economic system is going to fail eventually. (Esse sistema econômico vai falhar mais cedo ou mais tarde.) Those two countries are certainly going to face a war. (Aqueles dois países certamente vão entrar em guerra.) FONTE: YOUTUBE Maroon 5 - She Will Be Loved F Y multimídia: música 1.2.3.2 Negativa: Sujeito + to be (present) + NOT + going to + verb Exemplos: You are not going to buy it! (Você não vai com- prar isso!) People are going to accept any changes. (As pes- soas vão aceitar quaisquer mudanças) This is going to be designed in China. (Isto vai ser projetado na China) http://www.better-english.com/grammar/willgo.htm multimídia: site 1.2.3.3. Interrogativa: to be (present) + sujeito + going to + verb Exemplos: Are we going to accept his apologies? (Nós va- mos aceitar suas desculpas?) Am I going to have to do it? (Eu vou ter que fazer isso?) 66 3. (Unesp) I’ll __________ soccer this afternoon. a) playing b) played c) to play d) play e) plays 4. (Mackenzie) A prize __________ to whoever solves this equation. a) has given b) should give c) is giving d) will be given e) must have given 5. (Unesp) Assinale a alternativa correta: I expect that she _____ arrive at about midnight. a) is b) will c) going to d) must e) goes 6. (UEL) A forma verbal You’ll em “You’ll find some monster savings on books at amazon. co.uk” indica: a) hábito. b) futuro. c) necessidade. d) permissão. e) vontade. 7. (UEL) Assinale a letra correspondente a alternativa que preenche corretamente a lacuna do texto apresentado. Imagine travelling directly to London and Paris with no connec- tions to run for, no buses to board, no taxis to hail. In fact, the only thing you have to change is the tongue you speak upon ar- rival. That’s exactly what you _____ experience aboard the high speed Eurostar passenger train. a) are b) hadc) does d) go e) will 8. Assinale a alternativa que NÃO expressa uma ação no futuro. a) Brazil will certainly become a global player. b) The new laws will be discussed by the parliament. c) World leaders are meeting next week. d) World leaders will meet every November in Davos, Switzerland. e) Representatives are now discussing the new legislation. 9. Choose the alternative that best completes the gaps: Smartphones __________ the simpler cell phones a long time ago, and nobody knows what __________ them in future. a) replaced – will replace b) will replace – will replace c) replaces – replaced d) replaced – are going to e) is going to – will replace 10. Assinale a alternativa que corretamente preenche a sentença abaixo: Education __________ adopt new technologies in order to remain useful to society. a) are going to b) will to c) is going to d) aren’t going to e) won’t be A.P.A. Fixação TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 6 QUESTÕES STRONGER, FASTER, SMARTER Exercise does more than build muscles and help prevent heart dise- ase. New science shows that it also boosts brainpower - and may offer hope in the battle against Alzheimer’s. BY MARY CARMICHAEL The stereotype of the “dumb jock” has never sounded right to Charles Hillman. A jock himself, he plays hockey four times a week, but when he isn’t body-checking his opponents on the ice, he’s giving his mind a comparable workout in his neuros- cience and kinesiology lab at the University of Illinois. Nearly every semester in his classroom, he says, students on the wo- men’s cross-country team set the curve on his exams. So re- cently he started wondering if there was a vital and overlooked link between brawn and brains - if long hours at the gym could somehow build up not just muscles, but minds. With collea- gues, he rounded up 259 Illinois third and fifth graders, mea- sured their body mass index and put them through classic PE routines: the “sit-and-reach”, a brisk run and timed push-ups and sit-ups. Then he checked THEIR physical abilities against their math and reading scores on a statewide standardized test. Sure enough, on the whole, the kids with the fittest bo- dies were THE ONES with the fittest brains, EVEN WHEN factors such as socioeconomic status were taken into account. Sports, Hillman concluded, might indeed be boosting the students’ in- tellect - and also, as long as he didn’t “take the puck to the head”, his own (...) (NEWSWEEK) 1. (UFSCar) A pesquisa apresentada no texto foi desen- volvida por: a) Hillman e 259 cidadãos de Illinois. b) colegas de Hillman e 259 cidadãos de Illinois. c) Hillman e outros colegas. d) participantes do time de hockey de Illinois e mul- heres do time de corrida. 67 04) David is going to study in a good school. 08) Gregory is working in Africa now. 16) David will be eleven years old next year. 8. (PUC-PR) I’m sorry, but I __________ able to meet you for lunch tomorrow. a) haven’t been b) can’t be c) don’t be d) won’t be e) wasn’t TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 2 QUESTÕES. Leia o texto: A wave of anger is sweeping the ci- ties of the world The protests have many different origins. In Brazil people rose up against bus fares, in Turkey against a building project. Indo- nesians have rejected higher fuel prices. In the euro zone they march against austerity, and the Arab spring has become a per- ma-protest against pretty much everything. Yet just as in 1848, 1968 and 1989, when people also found a collective voice, the demonstrators have much in common. In one country after another, protesters have risen up with bewildering speed. They tend to be ordinary, middle-class people, not lobbies with lists of demands. Their mix of revelry and rage condemns the corruption, inefficiency and arrogance of the folk in charge. Nobody can know how 2013 will change the world – if at all. In 1989 the Soviet empire teetered and fell. But Marx’s belief that 1848 was the first wave of a proletarian revolution was confou- nded by decades of flourishing capitalism and 1968 did more to change sex than politics. Even now, though, the inchoate signi- ficance of 2013 is discernible. And for politicians who want to peddle the same old stuff, news is not good. THE ECONOMIST, JUNE 29, 2013. ADAPTADO. 9. (Fuvest) Ao comparar os protestos de 2013 com mo- vimentos políticos passados, afirmase, no texto, que: a) nem sempre esses movimentos expressam anseios coletivos. b) as crenças de Marx se confirmaram, mesmo após 1848. c) as revoltas de 1968 causaram grandes mudanças políticas. d) não se sabe se os protestos de 2013 mudarão o mundo. e) mudanças de costumes foram as principais conse- quências de movimentos passados. e) colegas de Hillman e participantes do time de hockey de Illinois. 2. (UFSCar) A ideia expressa pelo marcador textual “even when”, destacado no texto, é a de que: a) embora não se considerem os fatores socioeco- nômicos, os resultados são confiáveis. b) mesmo quando considerados os fatores socioeco- nômicos, os resultados são confiáveis. c) se considerássemos os fatores socioeconômicos, os resultados seriam confiáveis. d) porque consideramos os fatores socioeconômicos, os resultados são confiáveis. e) somente considerando os fatores socioeconômicos, os resultados são confiáveis. 3. (UFSCar) Os resultados da pesquisa indicam que: a) não há uma relação significativa entre a prática de atividade física e o desempenho do cérebro. b) fazer parte do time de hockey é fundamental para alunos de 3as e 5as séries. c) as mulheres têm melhor desempenho nas provas de neurociência do que os homens. d) estudantes com índice de massa corporal alto não devem ser submetidos a exercícios físicos. e) há uma forte relação entre a prática de atividade física e o desempenho do cérebro. 4. (UFSCar) Charles Hillman é: a) professor e pesquisador da Universidade de Illinois. b) médico neurocirurgião na Universidade de Illinois. c) estudante da Universidade de Illinois. d) atleta da Universidade de Illinois. e) técnico do laboratório de neurociência da Univer- sidade de Illinois. 5. (UFSCar) Charles Hillman tinha um questionamento sobre uma possível relação entre: a) as mulheres atletas e o time de corrida. b) a prática de exercícios físicos e a otimização do desempenho do cérebro. c) o uso do cérebro e o desenvolvimento do câncer de mama. d) a prática de exercícios físicos e o desenvolvimento de músculos nas mulheres. e) as habilidades físicas e o aumento do cérebro. 6. (UFSCar) Os referentes “their” e “the ones” destaca- dos no texto se referem respectivamente a: a) mulheres e crianças. b) habilidades físicas e crianças. c) testes padronizados e mulheres. d) alunos de 3as e 5as séries e crianças. e) corpos e cérebros. 7. (UFSC) Select the propositions which indicate Future Tense. 01) Paul and Mary are going to Africa in July. 02) The children won’t be hungry anymore. 68 10. (Fuvest) Segundo o texto, os protestos de 2013, em diversos lugares do mundo, a) vêm perdendo força por falhas de organização. b) questionam a atuação dos lobbies nas reivindi- cações das diversas classes sociais. c) condenam a corrupção e outros comportamentos inadequados da classe política. d) resultam de motivações econômicas precisas. e) têm poucos aspectos em comum. A.P.A. Complementar TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 4 QUESTÕES NEUROSCIENCE NO MORE...PLEASE! A chocolate orgy for science’s sake. How does your brain know when you’ve had too much of a good thing? Dana Small, a cognitive neuroscientist at Northwestern Uni- versity’s School of Medicine in Chicago, decided to look into it by fe- eding people chocolate. She stood in the hallway of her department and recruited nine self-proclaimed cocoa-bean lovers, hooked them up to MRI machines, gave them chocolate, then measured blood flow in their brains while they ate. Between bites, they were asked two questions: “Do you want another piece?” and “On a scale of minus-10 to plus10, how much did you like the last piece?” Of cou- rse, in the time thevolunteers’ euphoria over tasting the confection turned to satiation, and, as it did, Small saw changes in their brain activity. When the subjects ate chocolate and enjoyed it, a region associated with mood – the medial part of the orbital frontal cor- tex – was active. But as they began to feel satiated, blood stopped flowing to that area and increased in another region probably res- ponsible for the decision to stop eating – the adjacent lateral orbital frontal cortex. Such images will help scientists better understand how addiction causes the brain’s normal response to a good thing to go awry. But the research also yielded a curious, unexpected re- sult: Women ate twice as much chocolate as men before getting their fill. And while men stopped eating because they began to find the chocolate unpleasant, women stopped only when their bellies were stuffed. During the course of the study, Small also discovered another interesting fact: People of Asian descent tended to be satis- fied after eating only one or two pieces of chocolate. Non-Asians, on the other hand, practically gorged themselves. SINHA, G. NO MORE...PLEASE! POPULAR SCIENCE. NEW YORK, V. 259, N. 7, JAN. 2002, P. 42. VOCABULÁRIO: TO GO AWRY: SAIR DO CURSO NORMAL; GORGED THEMSELVES: EMPANTURRARAM-SE 1. (UFG) Da leitura do texto, percebe-se que a pergun- ta inicial: a) expressa o interesse de um grupo de obesos. b) é respondida pelos participantes da pesquisa. c) cria expectativa para a apresentação do assunto. d) evidencia a complexidade do fenômeno. e) revela uma preocupação dos participantes. 2. (UFG) Em relação à tipologia textual, o texto é: a) argumentativo, porque trata dos malefícios e bene- fícios de se comer chocolate. b) científico, porque apresenta uma tese e procura fundamentá-la com evidências. c) apelativo, por tentar convencer as pessoas a come- rem mais chocolate. d) didático, porque requer o conhecimento do signifi- cado exato dos termos com que opera. e) informativo, porque relata os resultados de uma experiência na área de neurociência. 3. (UFG) Da leitura do texto, conclui-se que: a) os participantes da pesquisa, de ambos os sexos, eram apreciadores de chocolate. b) o experimento foi realizado por meio de exames laboratoriais. c) a sensação de saciedade surge dez minutos após a ingestão incessante de chocolate. d) a carência afetiva provoca, nas mulheres, um im- pulso para um maior consumo de chocolate. e) descendentes asiáticos satisfazem-se quando co- mem grande quantidade de chocolate. 4. (UFG) A sentença “(...) they began to feel satiated, blood stopped flowing to that area and increased in another re- gion“ está corretamente escrita no simple future em: a) they will began to feel satiated, blood will stopped flowing to that area and will increased in another region b) they are going to feel satiated, blood is going to stop flowing to that area and will have increased in another region c) they will to begin to feel satiated, blood will stop flowing to that area and will be increased in another region d) they will begin to feel satiated, blood will stop flowing to that area and will increase in another region e) they have began to feel satiated, blood has stopped flowing to that area and has increased in another region TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 4 QUESTÕES Book reading experience and the ultimate technology The computer is just a feeble attempt of humankind to re- plicate the workings of a unique invention, while science is an attempt to understand the craftsmanship of the greatest masterpiece – Nature. As we all know, scientists can only replicate carbon-based life forms. They cannot literally make from out of thin air any gene- tic material. They rely on raw materials from resources provided by nature. It is just like trying to simulate the functions of the human brain by inventing the computer. The brain is the fas- 69 test and most powerful multimedia computer that exists in the present. It is organic, self upgrading and has high articulation. The computer, on the other hand, cannot help itself without the intervention of humans. A computer hooked to the internet pro- vides access to all the knowledge of humanity. However, there is a downside about this convenience. It deprives the human brain the necessary thinking skills and training for data hun- ting and information processing. A student today only needs to access the internet to do research homework. However, the learning experience is defeated since it is not the student who researches the data needed for the school homework but the web browser. 1So where is the selective learning process? If carrying books is so tiresome, mobile devices like smart pho- nes will do the trick. All a student has to do is search in a web browser for the Intext free eBook reader, for example, and then hit enter. While there are lots of commercially available eBooks being offered out there, education must not be so costly. That’s why there are millions of electronic books downloadable all over the world for free. Reading books, either printed or the electronic version, provides the learner the essential mental training for data hunting, logical reasoning for information processing and the uncanny ability to differentiate truth from lies, right from wrong, facts from fallacy, real from a hoax and the appropriate from the inappropriate. In the process of reading a book, a learner elevates the capaci- ty of the human brain for stimulation of the senses by indexing information for instant recall and further developing comprehen- sion through mental processing of data. Nature is the “Ultimate Technology” and the human brain is one of its most powerful inventions. We are zillions of years more ad- vanced as compared to our technology. However, digital media such as e-texts can surely serve as invaluable and easy to access reading material. Thus, let’s take advantage of this technology to the fullest by engaging in reading extensively in order to enhance our natural skills and talents. JOEFEL CAGAMPANG HTTP://WWW.GOARTICLES.COM 5. (UERJ) The general theme of the text is the impact of the digital era on the process of knowledge acquisition. In order to express his point of view, the author bases his argument on the following factor: a) improvement of brain activities. b) advancement of genetic research. c) superiority of human intelligence. d) development of concentration skills. 6. (UERJ) Paragraph 5 lists positive results from read- ing books. The exemplification offered by the author emphasizes the capacity of: a) synthesis. b) distinction. c) identification. d) memorization. 7. (UERJ) The use of computers for learning purposes is discussed in the text. According to the author, the use of computers without any guidance constitutes an obstacle to: a) data collecting. b) logical thinking. c) knowledge sharing. d) quantitative browsing. 8. (UERJ) The strategy of asking questions is often used for rhetorical purposes. So where is the selective learning process? (ref. 1) The question above is intended to: a) express a doubt. b) start a discussion. c) confirm a viewpoint. d) anticipate an objection. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 2 QUESTÕES Audio books: all pros, no cons What is an audio book? An audio book is a recording of the contents of a book read aloud, created and distributed on CDs, cassette tapes or other digital formats. They have become quite popular since first being introduced – roughly 20 years ago – with the CD format in the lead for sales. One of the pros for audio books is the fact that they support mul- ti-tasking, and can also be stored into small devices for easy liste- ning, like an iPod or MP3 Player. For example, you may listen to one and retrieve the information you would from a regular book while exercising, cleaning around the house, or just while in the car driving. You would not be able to do any of those activities while reading a regular book. But while listeningto an audio book this becomes possible. Another pro supporting audio books is the effect it has on chil- dren’s motivation and learning. Teaching them to read has never been any easier or enjoyable in their favor. By using different types of toys from favorite cartoon characters to interact with audio books, children are able to learn a usually difficult subject quite easily while also having a good time. My final pro supporting an audio book is the fact that people who are unable to read regular books, due to certain problems they cannot help such as blindness, are certainly able to listen to audio books to gather the contents they may need from a regular book. This is a major pro that is a big help to a lot of people around the world, with no con to argue against it. So why not go and check out some audio books today and find out for yourself how useful and how fun they are? There are loads of free digital audio books as well. 1Therefore, you can test the water for free as well. HTTP://BOOKSTOVE.COM 70 9. (UERJ) Therefore, you can test the water for free as well. (ref. 1) In the fragment, people are encouraged to read audio books to test their efficiency. The major motivation for this course of action consists of: a) courtesy offer. b) speedy ordering. c) refundable option. d) costless download. 10. (UERJ) In the text, the title and subtitle clearly re- flect the author’s position regarding audio books. The idea conveyed by the title and subtitle is best ex- pressed in the following statement: a) Their use is considered as a beneficial practice. b) Their efficiency is confirmed in sports activities. c) Their quality is determined by the narrator’s voice. d) Their advantage is related to mental concentration. A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. Escreva as frases a seguir usando as duas formas de future: will e going to. O primeiro item já foi feito para você. a)You (to earn) a lot of money. (will): You will earn. (going to): You are going to earn. b)You (to travel) around the world. (will): _______________________________ (going to): ___________________________ c)You (to meet) lots of interesting people. (will): _______________________________ (going to): ___________________________ d)Everybody (to adore) you. (will): _______________________________ (going to): ___________________________ e) You (not/to have) any problems. (will): _______________________________ (going to): ___________________________ f) Many people (to serve) you. (will): _______________________________ (going to): ___________________________ g) They (to anticipate) your wishes. (will): _______________________________ (going to): ___________________________ h) There (not/to be) anything left to wish for. (will): _______________________________ (going to): ___________________________ i) Everything (to be) perfect. (will): _______________________________ (going to): ___________________________ j) But all these things (to happen/only) if you marry me. (will): _______________________________ (going to): ___________________________ TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 2 QUESTÕES Future Hot Careers: Space Tourism to Genetic Counseling In our information-rich society there is an ever increasing de- mand for workers in the fields of computers, health care, scien- ce and space technology − much of it driven by the demands of the retiring baby boomers. If you like to plan ahead, here is sampling of some of the jobs that will be hot in the next several years and beyond. Genetic Counseling Doctors will be able to test for dozens of genetic markers and predict when a person will likely experience a genetically based condition. With more tests and treatments available, genetic counselors will be needed to help individuals and families make decisions about genetic technologies as it applies to science and personal beliefs. Today, about 2,000 counselors are recognized by the American Board of Genetic Counseling. Space Tourism While this one may sound far-fetched, the entire industry of spa- ce tourism is poised to “take off”. There are already 200 reser- vations for space flights. Space Adventures plans on hiring about 10 space tour guides to start, said spokeswoman Stacey Tearne. The world’s first space hotel is also set to open, which could be the beginning of a whole new sector of jobs which will require the merging of space smarts with great hospitality. Roboticists In a way, robots have already taken over the world. The com- ponents, processors and sensors for robots are getting cheaper every quarter, said Paul Saffo, a technology forecaster. Hundreds of new applications for robots are already being developed. Ro- bots already work in research laboratories, factories, hospitals, daycares and housekeeping, and the trend is only expected to grow as the field progresses. DISPONÍVEL EM: <HTTP://WWW.DAILYGALAXY.COM/MY_WEBLOG/2008/08/ FUTURE-TOP-10-H.HTML>. ACESSO EM: 31 DE MAIO DE 2012. [ADAPTADO]. Responda às perguntas a seguir em português. 2. (UFRM) Em relação aos avanços da genética apresen- tados no texto: a) o que os médicos poderão fazer no futuro? b) qual será o papel dos consultores genéticos? 3. (UFRM) De acordo com o texto, a indústria do turismo espacial está pronta para decolar. Mencione os três fa- tos que permitem ao autor fazer essa afirmação. 71 TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO “Due to budget cuts, our school is not distributing report card. They are available online for download. Luckily, I’m the only one in my family that is computer literate, not that I’ll make changes or anything...” DISPONÍVEL EM: <HTTP://WWW.CARTOONSTOCK.COM/DIRECTORY/C/ COMPUTER_LITERACY.ASP&H>. ACESSO EM: 2 SET. 2011. 4. (UEG) Como o estudante do quadrinho acima pode conseguir informações sobre suas notas na escola? 5. (Unicamp) WHY WE NEED A FOOD REVOLUTION BY JAMES OLIVER We’re losing the war against obesity in the US. It’s sad, but true. Our kids are growing up overweight and malnourished from a diet of processed foods, and today’s children will be the first ge- neration ever to live shorter lives than their parents. It’s time for change. It’s time we switch to fresh food and home cooking. It’s time for a Food Revolution. (ADAPTADO DE HTTP://WWW.JAMIEOLIVER.COM/ FOUNDATION/ JAMIES-FOOD-REVOLUTION/. ACESSADO EM 28/09/2011.) a) Quais são, segundo o texto, as consequências da atual dieta das crianças norte-americanas? b) No que consiste a revolução alimentar proposta por James Oliver? Gabarito Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. E 2. A 3. D 4. D 5. B 6. B 7. E 8. E 9. A 10. C A.P.A. Fixação 1. C 2. B 3. E 4. A 5. B 6. D 7. 1 + 2 + 4 + 16 = 23 8. D 9. D 10. C A.P.A. Complementar 1. C 2. E 3. A 4. D 5. C 6. B 7. B 8. C 9. D 10. A A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. a) - b) you will travel / you are going to travel c) you will meet / you are going to meet d) Everybody will adore you. / Everybody is going to adore you. e) You will not have any / You are not going to have f) Many people will serve you. / Many people are going to serve you. g) They will anticipate your / They are going to anticipate h) There will not be anything… / There is not going to be i) Everything will be perfect. / Everything is going to be j) But all these things will only happen / But all these things are only going to happen 2. a) Médicos só conseguirão testar marcadores genéti- cos para prever a possibilidade das pessoas sofrerem de uma doença genética no futuro. b) Consultores genéticos serão responsáveis por aju- dar indivíduos e famílias a chegarem a conclusões a respeito de tecnologias genéticas. 3. De acordo com o texto, já foram feitas 200 reservas para voos espaciais; já existem planos para a contratação de guias turísticos espaciais, e o primeiro hotel espacial pode- rá ser inaugurado em breve. 4. O estudante pode simplesmente baixá-los da internet. (He can download them.) 5. a) Obesidade, má nutrição eexpectativa de vida re- duzida, em comparação aos pais. b) A volta do consumo de alimentos frescos e de co- mida caseira. 72 1. Introdução Os modal verbs, ou somente modals, são verbos auxilia- res que têm a capacidade de mudar o sentido de verbos que os sucedem. Eles obedecem a seu próprio padrão gramatical. Os verbos modais são: can, could, may, might, should, must, ought to, will, shall e would. Veja as regras gramaticais dos verbos modais: Não adicione "s" à terceira pessoa do singular He can understand Portuguese very well. (correct) He cans understand Portuguese very well. (incorrect) FONTE: YOUTUBE Aula 15 - Modal verbs F Y multimídia: vídeo Não são usados verbos auxiliares para frases negativas ou interrogativas. I should not be afraid of ghosts. (correct) I don’t should be afraid of ghosts. (incorrect) Should I carry on studying? (correct) Do you should be afraid? (incorrect) NUNCA acrescente a partícula to antes ou depois de um verbo modal (com exceção de have to e ought to) He can understand Russian very well (correct) He can to understand Russian very well (incorrect) De modo a facilitar seu entendimento, os verbos modais serão separados em categorias. 1. Can/could, may/might Expressam capacidade, habilidade, possibilidade, probabi- lidade, para pedir e dar permissão e pedir auxílio. Todas as leituras possíveis incluem, no português, o verbo "poder", sendo que o verbo CAN está sempre no presente. COULD, além de ser a forma de passado de CAN, também pode ser compreendido como futuro do pretérito do verbo CAN (poderia, poderíamos). MAY e MIGHT também são usual- mente compreendidos como poderia, poderíamos, etc. Estude os exemplos: CAN X COULD In order to achieve your goal, you can work on the weekends. (Para alcançar seu objetivo, você pode trabalhar aos finais de semana) – Uma indicação de algo que pode acontecer. In order to achieve your goal you could work on the weekends. (Para alcançar seu objetivo, você poderia trabalhar aos finais de semana.) – In- dicação de algo que você pode fazer, mas que eu imagino ser menos provável ou mais difícil de acontecer. CAN X MAY/MIGHT Can you help me, please? (mais informal) X May you help me, please? (mais formal, respeitoso) It can rain today. (É algo que pode acontecer, sem levar em consideração graus de probabilida- de.) X It may rain today (Há uma certa probabili- dade de que chova.) COULD We could watch a movie tonight, (Nós pode- ríamos assistir a um filme hoje à noite.) – Pos- sibilidade futura, situação hipotética. When I was a kid I could play the bass, but I’ve completely forgotten how to play it. (Quando eu era garoto, eu podia/tinha a habilidade de tocar baixo, mas eu esqueci completamente). – Passado If you were here, you could talk to us. (Se você estivesse aqui, você poderia conversar conosco) – Hipotético (subjuntivo). SHOULD WE CONTINUE HABILIDADES: 5, 6, 7, 15 e 18 COMPETÊNCIAS: 2, 5 e 6 CLASS 7 73 FONTE: YOUTUBE Modal verbs (can, could, might, should, etc) | Canguro English F Y multimídia: vídeo 2. Should, must, ought to, have to Trata-se de verbos que normalmente expressam sugestões, conselhos, ordens, proibições e obrigações. Eles são normal- mente entendidos em português como os verbos "deveria" ou "ter que". Estude os exemplos a seguir. SHOULD X MUST I think you should go out a little. (Eu acho que você deveria sair um pouco) – Uma simples su- gestão do que eu considero uma boa ideia. You must go now. (Você deve/ tem que ir agora) – Mais imperativo, quase uma ordem. You should read a book (Você deve/deveria ler um livro) – Uma simples sugestão; vai ser bom pra você. You must read that book (Você deve/deveria ler aquele livro) – É quase obrigatório que se leia o livro; ele é ótimo. SHOULD x OUGHT TO You should relax more (Vocês deveriam rela- xar mais) – Mais informal. You ought to relax more (Vocês deveriam rela- xar mais) – Mais formal, mais enfático. WILL, SHALL e WOULD Todos os verbos desse grupo são verbos auxiliares, ou seja, não têm sentido sozinhos, mas somente associados ou re- ferindo-se a outros verbos. De forma geral, WILL e SHALL fazem com que o verbo que aparece imediatamente depois deles esteja no simple fu- ture. SHALL é um verbo arcaico (deixou de ser utilizado com frequência) e, além de muito formal, é usado com os sujeitos I e WE. WOULD é um verbo auxiliar muito importante, pois equi- vale (com poucas exceções) a todo o futuro do pretérito do português. Observações 1: Quando utilizado em sua forma negativa, MUST ex- pressa proibição. Exemplos: You must not (mustn’t) cross the street now. (Você não pode/ não deve/ está proibido cruzar a rua agora.) She mustn’t smoke here. We are in a hospital. (Ela não deve fumar aqui. Nós estamos em um hospital). Observações 2: A locução verbal have to (+ verb) atende às mes- mas regras gramaticais aplicáveis ao verbo to have, mas modifica a função do verbo que o segue, deixando de expressar posse e passando a expres- sar obrigação. Exemplos: You have to protect the forest. You’re a citizen. (Você tem que proteger a floresta. Você é um cidadão.) Everybody has to wear a helmet from that point on. That’s what the regula- tions say. (Todos têm que usar um capacete a partir deste ponto. É o que diz o regulamento.) No entanto, na negativa, a frase não expressa mais obrigatoriedade, e sim falta de necessidade. Exemplos: You don't have to help me anymore, i understood the subject. She doesn't have to find someone else to pay her bills. She has her own job and makes her own money. Estude os exemplos a seguir: He will talk to you later. (Ele conversará/vai conversar com você mais tarde) We shall talk to you later. (Nós conversare- mos/vamos conversar com você mais tarde) They would talk to you if they had time. (Elas conversariam com você se tivessem tempo.) 74 Christmas Carol 6 capítulos de interpretação multimídia: livro WILL X WOULD É importante perceber nitidamente as diferenças entre es- ses dois verbos. I will like to meet them. (Eu vou gostar de co- nhecê-las) I would like to meet them. (Eu gostaria de conhecê-las) Money will be a problem. (Dinheiro será um problema.) Money would be a problem (Dinheiro seria um problema.) SHALL Os usos mais comuns do modal SHALL estão presentes na- quelas perguntas de confirmação, as QUESTION TAGS. Veja os exemplos a seguir: Let’s start, shall we? (Vamos começar?) Shall we dance? (Vamos dançar?) Além disso, é possível observar a presença de SHALL em textos jurídicos ou religiosos, justamente por serem textos ou muito mais formais ou muito antigos. Education shall be free (A educação será/de- verá ser gratuita) You shall not murder. (Não matarás) www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/course/lower- -intermediate/unit-30/session-2 multimídia: site Formas negativas As formas negativas dos modal verbs são obtidas através da adição da palavra NOT. Cannot (can’t); could not (couldn’t); may not, might not; should not (shouldn’t); must not (mustn’t); ought not to; will not (won’t); shall not (shan’t); would not (wouldn’t). Formas interrogativas As formas interrogativas dos modal verbs são obtidas atra- vés da inversão do sujeito da oração e do verbo modal. Can I...?; could I...?; may I...?; might you...? should you...?; must I...? will you...? would you...? Shall we...? Apêndice #1 As formas de passado dos modal verbs são obtidas da se- guinte forma: modal + have + past participle Exemplos: You should have arrived earlier. (Você deve- ria ter chegado mais cedo) You could have organized your bedroom. (Você poderia ter organizado seu quarto.) I wouldn’t have done it this way. (Eu não te- ria feito isto desta maneira) Observação A lista dos verbos irregulares contendo seus respectivos past participles está anexada na aula 5 desta apostila. Apêndice #2 Existem algumas outras estruturas que por vezes são colo- cadas entre os verbos modais, principalmente por compar-tilharem algumas de suas características. São elas: Needn’t o mesmo de don’t need to Exemplo: You needn’t feed the dog/ You don’t need to feed the dog (Você não precisa alimentar o cachorro) Had better Similar a should. Exemplo: You had better/should leave now. (Você deveria sair agora) 75 Would rather (‘d rather) Similar a would prefer. Exemplo: I would rather/would prefer to watch a movie tonight. (Eu preferiria assistir a um filme hoje à noite) FONTE: YOUTUBE Coldplay - Fix You F Y multimídia: música Apêndice #3 Veja alguns dos casos particulares a seguir: O futuro de CAN é dado pela locução verbal be able to. Exemplo: Students will be able to solve that kind of drill. (Os estudantes serão capazes de/consegui- rão resolver aquele tipo de atividade.) O passado de may é dado pelo verbo might. Exemplos: They may help you out. (presente – Eles pode- riam te ajudar) They might have helped you (passado – Eles poderiam ter te ajudado) O verbo there to be (haver/existir) pode ser combinado com os verbos modais. Exemplos: There can be a chance. (Pode haver uma chance) There should be someone waiting for them. (Deveria haver alguém esperando por eles) FONTE: YOUTUBE The Clash - Should I Stay or Should I Go F Y multimídia: música 3. Genetics Only a tenth of the human genome is studied Paying more attention to the rest seems like a good idea HTTPS://WWW.ECONOMIST.COM/SCIENCE-AND-TECHNOLOGY/2018/09/20/ ONLY-A-TENTH-OF-THE-HUMAN-GENOME-IS-STUDIED ONE tale of Nasreddin, a self-satirising 13th-century phi- losopher, tells of the time he lost a precious ring. When his wife asks why he is searching in the yard rather than inside, where the ring was lost, Nasreddin explains that the light is better outside. Looking for something where the search is easiest is a form of bias now known as the “street light” effect. A study published this week in PLOS Biology reports a similar skew in modern genet- ics that may be leaving thousands of important genes largely unstudied. There are roughly 20,000 genes in the human genome. Un- derstanding genes and the proteins they encode can help to unravel the causes of diseases, and inspire new drugs to treat them. But most research focuses on only about ten percent of genes. Thomas Stoeger, Luis Amaral and their colleagues at Northwestern University in Illinois used ma- chine learning to investigate why that might be. First the team assembled a database of 430 biochemi- cal features of both the genes themselves (such as the levels at which they are expressed in different cells) and the proteins for which they code (for example, their solu- bility). When they fed these data to their algorithm, they were able to explain about 40% of the difference in the attention paid to each gene (measured by the number of papers published) using just 15 features. Essentially, there were more papers on abundantly expressed genes that encode stable proteins. That suggests researchers — per- haps not unreasonably — focus on genes that are easier to study. Oddly, though, the pattern of publication has not changed much since 2000, despite the completion of the human genome project in 2003 and huge advances in DNA-sequencing technology. One possible reason for that can be found in another phenomenon known as the “Matthew effect”. Pithi- ly summarised by the adage “the rich get richer”, this predicts that researchers and money will flow to subjects that are already well-established. To see if this was the case, the team added the year of each gene’s discovery to their model and found its explanatory power jumped to 56%, because earlier discoveries translated into greater 76 Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. (FCC-BA) Yes dear, you _____ come home late tonight. a) must to b) ought c) can to d) may e) have 2. Assinale a alternativa correta. I’m sorry the train was late and I _____ arrive earlier. a) couldn’t b) ought not c) don’t d) mustn’t e) wouldn’t 3. (UFSC) Assinale a alternativa correta. You __________ smoke here. a) might to b) have permission c) can to d) may e) ought 4. (FCMSC-SP) You mustn’t take that medicine expressa: a) uma ordem. b) uma advertência. c) uma obrigação. d) uma proibição. e) um conselho. 5. (Mackenzie) The man in the cartoon: a) is planning his future. b) is currently attending college. c) has become a doctor. d) never misses an opportunity. e) regrets things in his past. attention. The identification of a new human gene is of- ten preceded by the discovery of similar genes in scientific workhorses such as fruit flies, rats and mice. When the researchers added the number of papers relating to these animal genes, the algorithm’s predictive powers improved even further, to 76%. All this might be justified if the most-studied genes were also the most important — if, for instance, mutations with- in them are associated with serious or common diseases. The team found that the most-researched 10% of genes were indeed between three and five times more likely to be involved in disease. But they receive disproportionate attention, accruing thousands of times the number of pub- lications as the least-resea rched 10%. The team found these biases were reproduced in fund- ing decisions made by America’s National Institutes of Health, the world’s biggest sponsor of biomedical research; they also found a similar pattern in drug de- velopment in the private sector. Drugs are often made to tweak the behaviour of the proteins that particular genes encode. Although there are presently drugs in de- velopment for 30% of disease-associated genes discov- ered before 1981, the same is true for only 2% of genes discovered since 2001. No doubt much remains to be learned about even the best-studied genes. But the upshot of all this is that a wealth of discoveries and treatments is likely to await scientists, and funding agencies, bold enough to look elsewhere. Time to shine a light on the darker parts of the genome. Vocabulary: bias: propensão; predisposição skew: inclinar; distorcer unravel: desfiar; desembaraçar assembled: montado; instalado accrue: resultar; acumular FONTE: YOUTUBE Básico #37: Modal Verbs - Inglês de Bolso F Y multimídia: vídeo 77 6. (PUC-RJ) In “you should start each day with a song... in your soul”, “should” expresses an idea of: a) certainty. b) obligation. c) impossibility. d) probability. e) advice. 7. (Mackenzie) In which of the statements does MUST express necessity? a) There’s somebody in the other office. It must be my boss! b) You mustn’t smoke here! c) She must be a very good student. She always gets A’s. d) I must go right now! e) Who must he be? There are lots of people around him! 8. (Mackenzie) In the sentence, “You may be wrong, but you may be right.” MAY means: a) possibility b) permission c) ability d) deduction e) obligation TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Stuck for cash? Here are some moneymaking ideas! Need some extra cash? Why not consider working from home? Setting up your own business may sound complicated and expen- sive, but there are many ideas that don’t need a lot of money to follow through. Plus, of course, there’s the added advantage that you can completely tailor your working day to suit your lifestyle. But don’t forget to tell the tax man or you could end up with an unexpected bill!!! 9. (UFPEL) A expressão “business may sound complica- ted and expensive...”, traz consigo a ideia de: a) permissão. b) possibilidade. c) certeza. d) habilidade. e) obrigação. 10. (Mackenzie) Indicate the alternative that best com- pletes the following sentence. “Look how wet the ground is. it __________ last night. a) might be sunny b) must have rained c) should have been warm d) may be snowing e) ought to dry A.P.A. Fixação (Fuvest-adaptado) Researchers studying 313 healthy Vietnam veterans have found that anger, depression and hostility may increase the risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes and high bloodpressure. Over a period of ten years, the men had regular physical examina- tions involving a wide variety of medicaltests. They also underwent psychological examinations using well-established questionnaires to determine their levels of hostility, anger and depression. The re- searchers measured blood levels of a protein called C3, a marker for the inflammation that is a risk factor for cardiovascular illnes- ses. After controlling for other variables, the scientists found that those in the highest one-quarter in hostility, anger and depression showed a steady and significant increase in C3 levels, while those in the lowest one-quarter had no increase. WWW.NYTIMES.COM. ADAPTADO. 1. O verbo MAY, em “depression and hostility may in- crease the risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes and high blood pressure” indica: a) habilidade. b) capacidade. c) certeza. d) obrigação. e) possibilidade. 2. O estudo mencionado no texto: a) avaliou a influência de níveis de hostilidade em in- divíduos deprimidos. b) baseou-se em diferentes tipos de exames médicos e respostas a questionários. c) foi importante para controlar os níveis da proteína C3 no sangue de soldados com pressão arterial elevada. d) foi desenvolvido para testar a relação entre pres- são arterial e diabetes. e) concentrou-se na análise de manifestações depres- sivas em veteranos do Vietnã. 78 3. Os resultados do estudo mencionado no texto suge- rem que: a) os níveis da proteína C3 diminuem em homens que passaram por experiências traumáticas de guerra. b) níveis altos de hostilidade são potencial ameaça à saúde mental. c) doenças cardiovasculares podem estar relaciona- das aos níveis de hostilidade, raiva e depressão. d) baixa ingestão de proteínas pode causar raiva e depressão, estimulando comportamentos hostis. e) os veteranos do Vietnã analisados estavam menos deprimidos que o esperado. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 6 QUESTÕES TEEN DEPRESSION Depression is defined as an illness when the feelings of sadness, hopelessness, and despair persist and interfere with a child or adolescent’s ability to function. Though the term “depression” can describe a normal human emotion, it also can refer to a mental health illness. Depressive illness in children and teens is defined when the feelings of de- pression persist and interfere with a child or adolescent’s ability to function. Depression is common in teens and younger children. About 5 percent of children and adolescents in the general popu- lation suffer from depression at any given point in time. Children under stress, who experience loss, or who have attentional, le- arning, conduct or anxiety disorders are at a higher risk for de- pression. Teenager girls are at especially high risk, as are minority youth. Depressed youth often have problems at home. In many cases, the parents are depressed, as depression tends to run in families. Over the past 50 years, depression rises, so does the teen suicide rate. It is important to remember that the behavior of de- pressed children and teenagers may differ from the behavior of depressed adults. The characteristics vary, with most children and teens having additional psychiatric disorders, such as behavior di- sorders or substance abuse problems. Mental health professionals advise parents to be aware of signs of depression in their children. Some of these signs may be: frequent sadness, tearfulness, crying; hopelessness; decreased interest in activities or inability to enjoy previously favorite activities; persistent boredom; low energy; so- cial isolation; poor communication; poor concentration; extreme sensitivity to rejection or failure, and increased irritability, anger, or hostility; among others. (EXTRAÍDO DE: WWW.FOCUSAS.COM/DEPRESSION.HTML) 4. (Unesp) Escolha a alternativa correta, de acordo com o texto. a) O comportamento de um adulto e o de uma crian- ça ou adolescente com depressão podem ser diferen- ciados, pois o adulto sempre está consciente de que sofre de depressão. b) O comportamento de um adulto e de uma criança ou adolescente com depressão nunca são diferencia- dos, ainda que a criança ou adolescente tenha distúr- bios psiquiátricos adicionais. c) Nos últimos 50 anos, os índices de depressão en- tre adultos aumentaram consideravelmente e, como consequência, o índice de suicídios de adultos tam- bém aumentou. d) Crianças que vivem sob pressão, que vivenciam per- das e que sofrem de ansiedade correm menos riscos de depressão do que adolescentes nas mesmas condições. e) Crianças que vivem sob pressão, que vivenciam per- das e que sofrem de ansiedade, entre outros fatores, apresentam maior tendência a sofrer de depressão. 5. (Unesp) Escolha a alternativa correta, de acordo com o texto. a) Depressão é um termo usado para indicar uma emo- ção humana normal ou uma doença mental que afeta a maior parte das crianças e adolescentes. Manifesta- -se como doença quando sentimentos como tristeza, desesperança e desencanto persistem e interferem no comportamento do indivíduo. b) Depressão é um termo usado para indicar uma emo- ção humana normal ou uma doença que também pode afetar crianças e adolescentes. Pode ser diagnostica- da como doença quando sentimentos como tristeza, desesperança e desencanto persistem e interferem no comportamento do indivíduo. c) Depressão é um termo usado para indicar uma emoção normal ou uma doença mental que afeta 5% das crianças pequenas. Pode ser diagnosticada na adolescência quan- do sentimentos como tristeza, desesperança e desencanto interferem no comportamento do indivíduo. d) Depressão é um termo usado para indicar uma emoção humana normal que, quando persiste, gera uma doença que também pode afetar crianças e ado- lescentes. Caracterizase pela tristeza, desesperança e desencanto manifestadas na adolescência. e) Depressão é um termo usado para indicar uma emo- ção ou uma doença que apenas afeta as mulheres, na adolescência. Pode ser diagnosticada quando senti- mentos como tristeza, desesperança e desencanto per- sistem e interferem no comportamento do indivíduo. 6. (Unesp) De acordo com o texto, indique a alternativa que preenche corretamente a lacuna da sentença: When one or more signs of depression persist, parents __________ professional help. a) would have to look for b) are looking for c) have to look for d) would have had to look for e) looked for 7. (Unesp) De acordo com o texto, indique a alternativa que expressa o mesmo sentido da expressão em desta- que na sentença: Parents and caregivers have to try to help teenagers when they FEEL DEPRESSED. a) feel down b) feel confused c) feel disappointed d) feel excited e) feel any mental disorders 79 8. (Unesp) De acordo com o texto, indique a alternativa que expressa o mesmo significado de: Adults expect teens to act moody. a) Teens expected adults to act moody. b) Adults are expected by teens to act moody. c) Adults and teens are expected to act moody. d) Teens are expected to act moody. e) Teens always act moody, although it is never ex- pected by adults. 9. (Unesp) Indique a sentença que expressa um conselho. a) When depressed, teens always ask for adult guidance. b) Teens see more of what life has to offer and then they become depressed. c) Adolescents who never make new friends become depressed. d) Adolescents don’t try to make new friends when they feel depressed. e) When teens become depressed, they should try to ask an adult for help. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO A RACIAL GAP Blacks undergo lifesaving lung-cancer surgery at a lower rate than whites. What can be done? Doctors have long known that lung cancers, which kills 160.000 Americans each year, takes a heavier toll among black Americans, particularly black men, than among whites. In part that’s because 34% of black men in the U.S. smoke cigarettes, compared with 28% of white men. (Black women tend to smoke less than white women). It also has to do with differences in income and access to medical care. Butthere has always been a lingering suspicion that some of the gap might be due to either overt or subconscious discrimination. A study in “New England Journal of Medicine” appears to bolster that dis- turbing conclusion. Unlike other cancers, lung cancer is extremely hard to detect in its earliest, most treatable stages. Even so, about 20% of lung-cancer patients are found to have a tumor whose biological characteristics and small size give them a good chance of being cured if the malignant growth is surgically removed. (TIME, OCTOBER 25TH, 1999) 10. (UFRRJ) “Might’ may be replaced by a) must. b) can. c) have to. d) should. e) could. A.P.A. Complementar TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 8 QUESTÕES ARE YOU A DIGITAL NATIVE OR A DIGITAL IMMIGRANT? We all know that we are living in an increasingly technologically driven world. Living here in the heart of Silicon Valley I certainly feel it every day. In fact, I don’t think I know a single couple in my neighborhood, other than my wife and I, who don’t work in the technology field in some capacity. Our local companies are Facebook, Apple, Google, Yahoo, and so many venture capi- tal firms that I can’t keep them straight. But you don’t have to live in Silicon Valley to feel that the world is getting more and more technology centered, focused, and driven. We can debate the pros and cons of this reality but we can’t deny that the world has changed very quickly in head spinning ways. Two recent com- ments led me to finally enter the 21st century by getting a smart phone this week, kicking and screaming. First, I mentioned to one of my undergraduate classes at Santa Clara University that I didn’t have a smart phone, but rather I had a dumb phone. My phone can make and receive phone calls and that’s about it. No email, internet, and so forth. So one of my students looked at me in an odd and curious way, like she was talking to someone from another planet, and stated in a matter of fact manner, “Professor Plante, even 2nd graders have smart phones.” Ouch! Second, I was talking with a producer at the PBS NewsHour who wanted me to do a live interview within a few hours of his call regarding some late breaking news about clergy sexual abuse, which is my specialty. I was out of the office and driving my car when he called and in a matter of fact manner he said that he wanted to send me some important information to my smart phone to best prepare me for the upcoming nterview. When I told him that I couldn’t receive anything since I had a dumb phone and not a smart phone, there was a long silence. He then said he’d have to just read it to me over the phone as a Plan B. He wasn’t happy ... neither was I. In case you haven’t noticed, the 21st century is really upon us and to live in it one really does need to be connected in my view. Although I often consider myself a 19th or 20th century guy trapped in the 21st century we really do need to adapt. For most of us we are just living in a new world that really demands comfort with and access to technology. This notion of digital native vs. digital immigrant makes a great deal of sense to me. Young people in our society are digital natives. They seem to be very comfortable with everything from iPhones to TV remotes. Digital immigrants, like me, just never feel that comfortable with these technologies. Sure we may learn to adapt by using email, mobile phones, smart ones or dumb ones, Facebook, and so forth but it just doesn’t and perhaps will never be very natural for us. It is like learning a second language ... you can communicate but with some struggle. This has perhaps always been true. I remember when I was in graduate school in the 1980s trying to convince my grandparents that buying a telephone answering machine as well as a clothes dryer would be a good idea. They looked at me like I was talking in another language or that I was from another planet. Perhaps we have a critical period in our lives for technology just like we do for language. When we are young we soak up langua- ge so quickly but find it so much harder to learn a new language when we are older. The same seems to be true for technology. So, this week I bought my first smart phone and am just lear- ning to use it. When questions arise, I turn to my very patient teenage son for answers. And when he’s not around, I just look to the youngest person around for help. So, what about you? 80 Are you a digital native or a digital immigrant and how does it impact your life? ADAPTED FROM: DIGITAL NATIVE VS DIGITAL IMMIGRANT? WHICH ARE YOU? PUBLISHED ON JULY 24, 2012 BY THOMAS G. PLANTE, PH.D., ABPP. IN: DO THE RIGHT THING. 1. (PUC adaptada) The text suggests that nowadays the world is divided into two groups of people. a) those who work in the technology field and those who are against it. b) the ones who live in Silicon Valley and those who live in the fields. c) the smart phone users and the wireless phone addicts. d) those who work for Apple and those who work for Facebook. e) the technological natives and the technological foreigners. 2. (PUC adaptada) The main purpose of the text is. a) to compare the new smart phones to old conven- tional devices. b) to argue that people should adopt simple dumb phones for their daily activities. c) to highlight that young people are usually techno- logically driven and centered. d) to analyze the characteristics and the advantages of smart phones. e) to prove that old people cannot learn how to use electronic instruments. 3. (PUC adaptada) In the sentence, “He then said he’d have to just read it to me over the phone as a Plan B.”, the underlined pronoun refers to: a) the author´s dumb phone. b) the information needed for the interview. c) the author’s smart phone. d) the upcoming interview. e) the conversation the author had with the TV producer. 4. (PUC adaptada) Mark the CORRECT statement con- cerning the meanings of the words extracted from the text. a) “kicking and screaming” in “... by getting a smart phone this week kicking and screaming.” means “re- volutionary” b) “odd” in “So one of my students looked at me in an odd and curious way, ...” means “respectful”. c) “late breaking news” in “I was talking with a produ- cer (...) some late breaking news” means “tragic news”. d) “a critical period” in “Perhaps we have a critical pe- riod in our life for technology”. means “a threatening moment”. e) “soak up” in “When we are young we soak up lan- guage so quickly (...)” means “absorb”. 5. (PUC adaptada) Paraphrasing the sentence “In case you haven’t noticed, the 21st century is really upon us and to live it one really does need to be connected in my view”, we can say that. a) the future is here and we must be connected to the world. b) the present century has come to make things more difficult for people. c) everybody understands that technology is neces- sary to survive on Earth. d) people should try to escape the new century’s ne- gative effects. e) digital natives have not noticed that they need to be connected. 6. (PUC adaptada) The author explains the expression “dumb phone” as: a) a phone used by those who are digital natives. b) a phone which does not have internet access. c) a phone that can communicate with people from another planet. d) a phone specially designed for second graders. e) a phone designed for those who have hearing problems. 7. (PUC adaptada) “We can’t deny” in “...we can’t deny that the world has changed very quickly...” and “My phone can make” in “My phone can make and receive phone calls...” express the ideas of, respectively: a) probability – duty b) condition – ability c) obligation – assumption d) possibility – obligation e) impossibility – ability 8. (PUC adaptada) Mark the INCORRECT option con- cerning the statements. a) The author’s resistance to using a smart phone is comparable to his grandparents’ resistance to using a clothes dryer. b) In the author’s opinion we can’t avoiddealing with technology in the 21st century. c) Teenagers are much more familiar to the digital world than adults are. d) When he bought a smart phone, the author imme- diately got adapted to using it. e) The author has recently faced some problems for not using a smart phone. 9. (UEL) World Class’ Pure Texas bottled water just hit supermarket shelves in Houston. The firm also bottles private-label water and is selling Hakeen Olajuwon H2O at Houston’s Summit Arena, home to the NBA champi- on Rockets. Giant food distributor Sysco MAY take the brand national. O verbo MAY, no texto, indica: a) um dever. b) uma necessidade. c) uma certeza. d) obrigação. e) possibilidade. 81 10. (PUC) “...learning about nonhuman organisms DNA sequences can lead to an understanding of their natural capabilities that can be applied toward solving challen- ges in health care,...” “...DNA sequences can lead to an understanding of their natural capabilitites...”, a palavra CAN indica a ideia de: a) conhecimento. b) permissão. c) habilidade. d) confirmação. e) probabilidade. A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. Todas as frases a seguir apresentam um erro gramati- cal. Reescreva-as corretamente: a) How do can book publishers beat Amazon? b) Who can to speak for the hospital patience? c) Imagine what a face cans tell us. d) Does a face can tell us something meaningful? e) The presidents of the USA and Russia to can actu- ally destroy the world. TEXTO PARA AS QUESTÕES 2 E 3 CAN WE FEED THE WORLD AND SUSTAIN THE PLANET? A five-step global plan could double food production by 2050 while greatly reducing environmental damage BY JONATHAN A. FOLEY The world must solve three food problems simultaneously: end hunger, double food production by 2050, and do both while drastically reducing agriculture’s damage to the environment. Five solutions, pursued together, can achieve these goals: stop agriculture from consuming more tropical land, boost the produc- tivity of farms that have the lowest yields, raise the efficiency of water and fertilizer use worldwide, reduce per capita meat con- sumption and reduce waste in food production and distribution. A system for certifying foods based on how well each one delivers nutrition and food security and limits environmental and social costs would help the public choose products that push agriculture in a more sustainable direction. (WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM. ADAPTADO.) Responda às perguntas a seguir em português 2. (Unesp) Dentre as cinco soluções apresentadas no se- gundo parágrafo do texto, quais as que se destinam a aumentar a produção de alimentos? 3. (Unesp) Qual é a proposta apresentada no texto para que as pessoas possam escolher produtos mais sustentáveis? TEXTO PARA AS QUESTÕES 4 E 5 SO LONG, FACEBOOK! ANDREA BENNETT, 18 AUGUST 2012. I’ve deleted my Facebook: I was tired of having to check my profile all the time and I just felt overexposed and ready to trade my computer for sunshine. I don’t need Facebook, and Facebook probably doesn’t need me. Right? Right… But those of us without Facebook run the risk of being considered abnormal or eccentric, or not being hired by potential employers who distrust people who don’t use the site. (ADAPTADO DE HTTP://WWW.ADBUSTERS.ORG/ BLOGS/ADBUSTERS-BLOG/ SO-LONG-FACEBOOK. HTML. ACESSADO EM 12/09/2012.) Responda às perguntas a seguir em Português 4. (Unicamp) Como a autora do texto acima estava se sentindo antes de fechar sua conta no Facebook? 5. (Unicamp) Quais são, segundo o texto, os riscos de não ter uma conta no Facebook? Gabarito Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. D 2. A 3. D 4. D 5. E 6. E 7. D 8. A 9. B 10. B A.P.A. Fixação 1. E 2. B 3. C 4. E 5. B 6. C 7. A 8. D 9. E 10. E A.P.A. Complementar 1. E 2. C 3. B 4. E 5. A 6. B 7. E 8. D 9. E 10. E A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. a) How can book publishers beat Amazon? b) Who can speak for the hospital patience? c) Imagine what a face can tell us. d) Can a face tell us something meaningful? e) The presidents of the USA and Russia can actually destroy the world. 2. Duas soluções apresentadas destinam-se à produção de alimentos. Uma delas cita o aumento da produtividade, a outra o aumento, de forma global, na eficiência no uso da água e fertilizantes. 3. Para possibilitar o acesso das pessoas e produtos suste- ntáveis, o texto propõe a criação de sistemas de certificação de alimentos que demonstre como são produzidos os ali- mentos, aspectos nutricionais e segurança alimentar e ambi- ental e o custo social deles. 82 4. A autora do texto sentia-se cansada de checar a todo instante seu perfil do Facebook ela achava que estava superexposta e pronta para trocar a luz do dia por seu computador. 5. Os riscos de não ter uma conta no Facebook concen- tram-se em duas áreas. A primeira é social: essas pessoas podem ser consideradas anormais ou excêntricas. A outra é profissional: não estar conectado pode dificultar novos contratos ou causar desconfiança das pessoas que têm contas em redes sociais. 83 Assim como o português, a língua inglesa também apresen- ta tempos perfeitos. Todos os tempos perfeitos apresentam uma combinação do verbo to have (ter) mais um particípio passado (as formas de particípio dos verbos irregulares es- tão apresentadas na tabela de verbos na unidade 5). Os tempos perfeitos da língua inglesa são: Present Perfect, Present Perfect Continuous, Past Perfect, Past Perfect Con- tinuous, Future Perfect e Future Perfect Continuous. 1. Present Perfect HAVE/HAS + PAST PARTICIPLE FONTE: YOUTUBE Present Perfect - A Chave para Entender F Y multimídia: vídeo O Present Perfect é um tempo verbal que promove um cer- to desconforto no estudante brasileiro. Tal sentimento vem do fato de que muita gente tende a traduzir as frases ao pé da letra, e não é assim que deve ser feito. Para melhorar a compreensão do Present Perfect, faz-se necessária a com- preensão dos usos associados a ele, assim como também faz-se necessária cuidadosa negociação dos significados por ele introduzidos nos vários de seus usos. São eles: Importante Ele é utilizado para expressar uma ação que começou no passado e cujas consequências se estendem (e são relevantes) até o momento da fala. Exemplos: I have lost my bag (Eu perdi minha bolsa). Nes- se caso, minha bolsa foi perdida em um ponto do passado e até agora continua perdida. She has left the house (Ela saiu da casa). Ela saiu da casa e ainda não retornou. Be quiet, please! I haven’t finished it yet. (Fique quieto, por favor! Eu ainda não terminei.) Ou seja, eu comecei algo e ainda estou executan- do essa tarefa. Ele é utilizado para expressar ações que têm se repeti- do nos últimos tempos. Exemplos: She has worked a lot recently. (Ela tem traba- lhado muito recentemente) I have slept very well since I changed room with my sister. (Eu tenho dormido muito bem desde que eu troquei de quarto com a minha irmã.) We have been responsible for her for 5 years. (Nós somos/temos sido os responsáveis por ela nos últimos 5 anos.) Nós começamos e ainda so- mos responsáveis por ele. Ele é utilizado para expressar ações que acabaram de acontecer ou estão quase acontecendo. Exemplos: I have just sent you my report. (Eu acabei de te mandar meu relatório) Rush! The plane has arrived. (Apresse-se! O avião está chegando) Com as palavras ever ou never, expressam-se normal- mente experiências de uma vida inteira. Exemplos: Have you ever seen a lion? (Você já viu um leão?) Ou seja, desde o nascimento até o momento da fala. No, I have never seen a lion. (Não, eu nunca vi um leão) Ou seja, desde o nascimento até o momento da fala. She has never been abroad (Ela nunca esteve no exterior) PERFECTION HABILIDADES: 1, 8 e 30 COMPETÊNCIAS: 1, 2 e 9 CLASS 8 84 Cuidado!!! Não se deve usar o Present Perfect junto com advérbios de tempo que definam um passado já concluído. Exemplos: I have arrived here last week (Incorrect) I arrived here lastweek (Correct) I have been here since last week. (Correct) O advérbio de tempo não expressa um tempo já acabado. Você está aqui desde a semana passada e ainda vai ficar mais. Joseph has lived there in 2010 (Incorect) Joseph lived there in 2010 (Correct) Joseph has lived there since 2010 (Correct) Ela mora lá desde 2010 até agora. 1.1. Present Perfect Continuous HAVE/HAS + BEEN + VERB(ING) É uma variação do Present Perfect. É utilizado quando se quer enfatizar a continuidade de uma ação que começou no passado e continua no presente. FONTE: YOUTUBE Entendendo Inglês #2 - Present Perfect Continuous (Aula de Inglês) F Y multimídia: vídeo Exemplos: She has been washing the dishes since she arrived. (Ela está lavando louça desde que ela chegou) Ou seja, ela não interrompeu a lavagem em nenhum momento. They have been married for 35 years. (Eles es- tão casados há 35 anos.) Ou seja, há 35 anos, eles estão casados. 2. Past perfect HAD + PAST PARTICIPLE O Past Perfect corresponde, de certa maneira, ao que a lín- gua portuguesa chama de pretérito mais-que-perfeito. A definição e o uso são quase os mesmos. Eles servem para expressar uma ação que está no passado do passado. Ou seja, caso se faça necessário expressar duas ações não si- multâneas no passado, a ação mais antiga (que aconteceu primeiro) deve ser expressa no Past Perfect, enquanto a mais recente (que aconteceu depois) deve ser expressa no Simple Past. Estude os exemplos a seguir. Exemplos: Don’t be mad! When you arrived work, we had already finished the meeting (Não fique bravo! Quando você chegou ao trabalho, nós já tínha- mos terminado a reunião.) Portugal and Spain had already signed the Treaty of Tordesillas when Pedro Álvares Cabral arrived on the Brazilian Coast in 1500. (Portugal e Es- panha já tinham/haviam assinado o tratado de Tordesilhas quando Pedro Álvares Cabral che- gou na costa brasileira em 1500) FONTE: YOUTUBE Passado perfeito em Inglês: Como usar Past Perfect F Y multimídia: vídeo 2.1. Past Perfect Continuous HAD + BEEN + VERB (ING) O Past Perfect também pode ser utilizado em sua forma contínua; assim como no Present Perfect Continuous, a ên- fase está na duração e continuidade da ação. Exemplos: I was short of breath on the phone because I had been running in the park. (Eu estava ofegante ao telefone porque eu tinha corrido/ estava cor- rendo no parque.) She had been waiting for a long time when you arrived. (Ela havia esperado/ esteve esperan- do por um longo tempo quando você chegou.) 3. Future perfect continuous Mesmo que sejam muito mais raros, é possível que você encontre os dois tempos acima em textos mais sofisticados; 85 3.2. Formas Negativas As formas negativas dos tempos perfeitos são consegui- das através da adição do advérbio NOT junto ao verbo auxiliar to have ou, em alguns casos, através da adição do advérbio NEVER. Exemplos: I have not (haven’t) played any games since I arri- ved. (Eu não joguei nenhum jogo desde que cheguei) The prizes had not been given away before noon. (Os prêmios não tinham sido distribuídos antes do meio-dia.) They have never given me a single smile. (Eles nunca deram um sorriso sequer para mim) 4. Infectious disease Progress on eradicating polio has stalled Cases caused by viruses derived from the vaccine are a growing worry PRINT EDITION | SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY. DEC 6TH 2018 In 1988 a world emboldened by the eradication of small- pox set its cross-hairs on polio. The aim was to enter the new millennium without this crippling virus. But the battle drags on. On November 30th an emergency committee on the global spread of polio, appointed by the World Health Organisation (who), delivered its latest verdict. Eliminating polio has become what Michel Zaffran, director of polio eradication at the who, calls a “dual emergency”. The first is the stalled progress on wiping out wild po- lio viruses in their last two strongholds, Afghanistan and Pakistan. The world’s steady countdown to zero since 2012 has stopped, with cases this year already surpass- ing those in 2017 (see chart). As a consequence there are worries that polio may travel back to countries which have already eradicated it, like India. The second emergency is the growing number of countries with cases of the disease that have been caused by a polio vaccine. These are still rare. But they are attracting more no- tice as those caused by the wild virus itself have dwindled. In 2017 cases caused by vaccine-derived viruses overtook, for the first time, those caused by the wild version. Polio vaccines come in two forms. The injectable version, which rich countries use, contains dead viruses and creates antibodies in the blood. Someone vaccinated with it who ingests the wild virus (say, by drinking contaminated water) portanto, vamos aprender um pouco sobre eles. Ambos são usados para expressar ações no futuro que se iniciaram em algum ponto do passado. Estude os exemplos a seguir: We will have lost over 40% of the Amazon fo- rest by 2050 if we don't change our environmental policies, according to a recent study. By 2030, I will have been living for 59 years. (Quando 2030 chegar, eu terei vivido por 59 anos.) – Future Perfect Continuous. FONTE: YOUTUBE Creedence Clearwater Revival: Have You Ever Seen The Rain? F Y multimídia: música 3.1. Formas interrogativas As formas interrogativas dos tempos perfeitos são conse- guidas através da inversão do verbo auxiliar to have com o sujeito da oração. Exemplos: Has she already started at Harvard University? (Ela já começou na universidade de Harvard?) Had the countries been conquered before 1800 A.D.? (Os países já haviam/tinham sido conquista- dos antes de 1800 d.C?) Will you have finished the book by December? (Você terá terminado o livro até dezembro?) https://www.english-4u.de/grammar_exercises.htm multimídia: site 86 is protected from the disease. But, for several weeks after- wards, the wild virus in his gut can be passed on to people who are not immune. The oral vaccine, by contrast, contains weakened live vi- rus. Because the antibodies it creates take up residence in the gut, they battle there with any wild virus a vaccinated person ingests, making further transmission less likely. The oral vaccine is thus a better option where wild polio viruses roam and vaccination rates are low—which has been the case in poor countries. The oral vaccine has another benefit. Someone vaccinated with it excretes the weakened form of the virus for a couple of weeks. Anyone who comes into contact with this excret- ed virus also gains immunity, and can pass it on further, to others who are not immune. In places with poor sanitation, this sort of passive vaccination is a boon—but only up to a point. As the weakened virus from the vaccine jumps from one unvaccinated person to another, the chances increase that something will go wrong. Along the way, the virus mu- tates and, after a year or so, can turn into a paralysing form that resembles the wild virus. Of the three strains in which poliovirus exists, type 2 is most adept at this trick. It causes more than 90% of par- alytic polio cases from mutated oral-vaccine strains. So when, in 2015, the wild type 2 polio virus was declared eradicated, it made sense to stop vaccinating people against it. In 2016, in a co-ordinated switch that took place over the course of two weeks, 155 countries re- placed their stocks of oral polio vaccine containing all three strains with a version that does not include the type 2 strain. To protect people from any type 2 vaccine-de- rived virus still circulating, the injectable vaccine was add- ed to routine immunisation schedules in these countries. Yet last year type 2 viruses derived from the oral vaccine caused cases of polio in Syria and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). This year cases emerged in Nigeria, Niger, So- malia and the DRC—a sign that gaps in vaccinationcover- age are widespread. Genomic analysis of the strains involved showed that they had crossed borders (rare for vaccine-de- rived strains) and that some had circulated undetected for as long as four years. Health officials worry that the outbreaks in Somalia, in particular, may spread to neighbouring countries. That is a setback for Africa. The last person on the conti- nent paralysed by the wild polio virus was a Nigerian child who contracted the disease in 2016, so Africa has probably already eradicated the wild virus. The outbreaks are also a sign that polio’s grand finale may be more drawn out than even pessimists expected. When wild polio virus disappears, the oral vaccine will be replaced with the injectable vaccine. How long such jabs will be needed to guard against rem- nants of vaccine-derived polio is anybody’s guess. FONTE: YOUTUBE Foreigner - Waiting For A Girl Like You F Y multimídia: música Vocabulary: stall/stalled: enguiçar; deixar de funcionar bod/embold/emboldened: encorajar; incentivar small pox: varíola cross-hairs: sob a mira aim: foco; objetivo crippling: paralisante; incapacitante spread: espalhar strongholds: fortaleza dwindle/dwindled: diminuir; definhar afterwards: depois; mais tarde roam: vagar; perambular rate: taxa; razão boon: benção; dádiva strain: puxar; esticar outbreaks: surto; surgimento setback: revés; contratempo drawn: desenhado; traçado jab: surrar; cutucar Phrasal Verbs: wipe/wiping out : eliminar; erradicar drag on: arrastar travel back: retornar; voltar FONTE: YOUTUBE Sting - Fields Of Gold F Y multimídia: música 87 A alternativa que melhor preenche a lacuna do texto é: a) is. b) was. c) had been. d) have been. e) has been. 6. (Mackenzie) Indicate the alternative that best com- pletes the following sentence. “When the manager arri- ved, the problem _______________.” a) was been solved already. b) should to be solved yet. c) had already been solved. d) has still been solved. e) had already solved. 7. (PUC) Choose the RIGHT alternative to complete the passage: “Everything __________ ready for the party. The room __________, the furniture __________. There __________ bottles of wine and food on the table. A jazz record __________ and the atmosphere was just right.” a) is – is clean – is moved – are – is playing b) was – had been cleaned – had been moved – were – was playing c) had been – had been cleaned – had been moved – were – had been played d) was – had cleaned – had moved – was – had played e) were – was cleaned – was moved – were – was playing 8. (UECE) In the sentences “Mr. Barbosa took on the entire legal system”, “he is overseeing the precedent- -setting trial” and “Mr. Barbosa has at times been exas- perated”, the verbs are, respectively, in the: a) simple present, present perfect and present continuous. b) past perfect, simple present and present perfect. c) simple past, present continuous and present perfect. d) simple past, present perfect and present continuous. 9. (UFSJ) Young Nina and her grandmother are having a conversation: “Grandma, how long have you and Granpa been mar- ried?” asked Nina. 1”We’ve been married for fifty years”, Grandma replied. (...) In the joke, the sentence We’ve been married for fifty years means that Nina´s grandparents: a) lived together for fifty years. b) were married for fifty years. c) got married fifty years ago. d) were married for a long time. 10. When Brazil __________ by Cabral in 1500, the Tordesilhas Treaty __________ by Portugal and Spain. a) is discovered – was signed b) was discovered – had already been sign c) discovered – signed Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. (Fuvest) Qual destas sentenças está correta: a) I don’t have never taken a course in Japanese. b) I have never taken a course in Japanese. c) I never didn’t take a course in Japanese still. d) I ever did not take a course in Japanese. e) I took not a course in Japanese ever. 2. (Unesp) Assinale a alternativa correta. We’re still waiting for Bill. He __________ yet. a) hasn’t come b) haven’t come c) didn’t come d) doesn’t come e) hadn’t come 3. (UFRGS) Choose the best alternative to complete the sentence below correctly: Mexico __________ many difficult crises in history, but now it __________ its own future. a) has faced – is shaping b) faced – was shaped c) have faced – shapes d) have been facing – shaped e) faces – has been shaped TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO CALORIC RESTRICTION Since 1935 researchers 4have known that when laboratory rats and mice are fed a very-low-calorie diet − 30 to 50 percent of 2their normal intake − they live about 30 percent longer than their well-fed confreres, as long as they get sufficient nutrition. Free radi- cals seem to be responsible: the less food consumed, the fewer free radicals are produced − possibly because on a low-calorie regimen cell’s power-generating machinery operates at high efficiency, as it does during exercise. There haven’t been solid studies on how caloric restriction affects human beings, but researchers speculate that someday drugs may 3enhance cellular efficiency without diets. Consuming fewer calories while maintaining a healthy level of nu- trients isn’t easy... 1so don’t quit eating just yet. (NEWSWEEK, JUNE 30, 1997. P. 59.) 4. (UFRN) A locução verbal have known (ref. 4) indica uma noção de temporalidade referente a: a) dois momentos no passado. b) passado e futuro. c) passado, exclusivamente. d) passado e presente. 5. (Ita) “Since 1985 the Shop __________ a Company limited by guarantee with charitable status; its aim is primarily to relieve poverty in developing countries”. (PANFLETO DA LOJA ONE WORLD SHOP, EM EDIMBURGO, ESCÓCIA) 88 d) was discovered – had already been signed e) has discovered – had signed A.P.A. Fixação 1. (Enem) A tira, definida como um segmento de história em qua- drinhos, pode transmitir uma mensagem com efeito de humor. A presença desse efeito no diálogo entre Jon e Garfield acontece porque: a) Jon pensa que sua ex-namorada é maluca e que Garfield não sabia disso. b) Jodell é a única namorada maluca que Jon teve, e Garfield acha isso estranho. c) Garfield tem certeza de que a ex-namorada de Jon é sensata, o maluco é o amigo. d) Garfield conhece as ex-namoradas de Jon e consid- era mais de uma como maluca. e) Jon caracteriza a ex-namorada como maluca e não entende a cara de Garfield. 2. (Enem) “My report is about how important it is to save paper, electricity, and other resources. I’ll send it to you telepathically.” GLASBERGEN, R. TODAY’S CARTOON. DISPONÍVEL EM: <HTTP:// WWW.GLASBERGEN.COM>. ACESSO EM: 23 JUL. 2010. Na fase escolar, é prática comum que os professores passem atividades extraclasse e marquem uma data para que as mesmas sejam entregues para correção. No caso da cena da charge, a professora ouve uma estu- dante apresentando argumentos para: a) discutir sobre o conteúdo do seu trabalho já entregue. b) elogiar o tema proposto para o relatório solicitado. c) sugerir temas para novas pesquisas e relatórios. d) reclamar do curto prazo para entrega do trabalho. e) convencer de que fez o relatório solicitado. 3. (Enem) WAR Until the philosophy which holds one race superior And another inferior Is finally and permanently discredited and abandoned, Everywhere is war − Me say war. That until there are no longer first class And second class citizens af any nation Until the color of a man’s skin Is of no more significance than the color of his eyes Me say war. That until the basic human rights are equally Guaranteed to all, without regard to race Dis a war. That until that day The dream of lasting peace, world citizenship Rule of international morality Will remain in but a fleeting illusion To be pursued, but never attained Now everywhere is war, war. And until the ignoble and unhappy regimes That hold our brothers in Angola, in mazambique, South Africa sub-human bondage Have been toppled, utterly destroyed Well, everywhereis war, me say war. War in the east, war in the west War up north, war down south War, war, rumours of war. And until that day, the african continent Will not know peace, we Africans will fight We find it necessary and we know we shall win As we are confident in the victory. MARLEY. B. DISPONÍVEL EM: >HTTP://WWW.SING365.COM>. Bob Marley foi um artista popular e atraiu muitos fãs com suas canções. Ciente de sua influência social, na mú- sica War, o cantor se utiliza de sua arte para alertar sobre: a) a inércia do continente africano diante das injus- tiças sociais. b) a persistência da guerra enquanto houver diferenças raciais e sociais. 89 c) as acentuadas diferenças culturais entre os países africanos. d) as discrepâncias sociais entre moçambicanos e an- golanos como causa de conflitos. e) a fragilidade das diferenças raciais e sociais como justificativas para o início de uma guerra. 4. (Enem) How’s your mood? For an interesting attempt to measure cause and effect try Ma- ppiness, a project run by the London School of Economics, whi- ch offers a phone app that prompts you to record your mood and situation. The Mappiness website says: ‘Were particularly interested in how peoples happiness is affected by their local environment air pollu- tion, noise, green spaces, and so on − which the data from Ma- ppiness will be absolutely great for investigating.” Will it work? With enough people, it might. But there are other problems. We’ve been using happiness and well-being interchangeably. Is that ok? The difference comes out in a sentiment like: “We were happier during the war.’ But was our well-being also greater then? DISPONÍVEL EM: <HTTP:WWW.BBC.CO.UK>. ACESSO EM: 27 JUN. 2011 (ADAPTADO). O projeto Mappiness, idealizado pela London School of Economics, ocupa-se do tema relacionado: a) ao nível de felicidade das pessoas em tempos de guerra. b) à dificuldade de medir o nível de felicidade das pessoas a partir de seu humor. c) ao nível de felicidade das pessoas enquanto falam ao celular com seus familiares. d) à relação entre o nível de felicidade das pessoas e o ambiente no qual se encontram. e) à influência das imagens grafitadas pelas ruas no aumento do nível de felicidade das pessoas. 5. (Enem) Going to university seems to reduce the risk of dying from coronary heart disease. An American study that involved 10 000 patients from around the world has found that people who leave school before the age of 16 are five times more likely to suffer a heart attack and die than university graduates. WORD REPAT NEWS. MAGAZINE SPEAK UP. ANO XIV, N 170. EDITORA CAMEOT, 2001. Em relação às pesquisas, a utilização da expressão uni- versity graduates evidencia a intenção de informar que: a) as doenças do coração atacam dez mil pacientes. b) as doenças do coração ocorrem na faixa dos dez- esseis anos. c) as pesquisas sobre doenças são divulgadas no meio acadêmico. d) jovens americanos são alertados dos riscos de doenças do coração. e) maior nível de estudo reduz riscos de ataques do coração. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Sex Tourism and Male Prostitution: European Women Travel to Africa In Search Of Young African Men For Sex Reuters has a very interesting article that caught my attention to- day about a new trend in the sex tourism industry. The piece is about old rich European women most likely from the United King- dom traveling to Africa in search of pretty young black men for sex. Notice the double standards in the mainstream media in relation to sex tourism. Sex tourism is not just “specific” to just “one gen- der” yet the Occidental media has always framed this as a male only domain. We all have watched the documentaries about Eu- ropean or North American men traveling to Asia, Africa, or South America in search of young women for sex. Female sex tourism has gone on for decades yet now the mainstream media is finally focusing on the other side of sex tourism from the rich western woman’s perspective. The rich Occidental women have egos as well they want to feel attractive and sexy. The European women feel compelled to travel to Africa in search of young black men because the power dyna- mics are in their favour. DISPONÍVEL EM: <HTTP://ORVILLELLOYDDOUGLAS.WORDPRESS. COM/2007/11/27/SEX-TOURISM-OLDER-WHITE-WOMENTRAVELLING-TO-AFRICA- SEEKING-YOUNG-BLACK-MEN>. ACESSO EM: 17 MAR. 2010. (ADAPTADO). 6. (UEG) De acordo com as afirmações do texto, é COR- RETO afirmar que: a) a mídia ocidental ignora o turismo sexual praticado por mulheres, dando enfoque apenas para os casos masculinos. b) a prostituição masculina já supera, em números, a prostituição feminina em países da África, da Ásia e da América do Sul. c) o turismo sexual na Ásia, África e América do Sul é praticado tanto por homens quanto por mulheres de origem europeia e norteamericana. d) além de aumentar a autoestima, o turismo sexual praticado por mulheres europeias na África é estimu- lado pelas relações de poder em favor desse gênero. 90 TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO Brazil struggles to curb sex tourism The UN estimates that two million young people under the age of 18 are involved in prostitution. Traditionally the trade has been as- sociated with Asia. But in recent years, Brazil has become an incre- asingly popular destination. There’s a paradise quality to Recife on the country’s north-east coast. Not the paradise of desert islands and solitude but a more earthly variety, with vibrant beaches and beautiful people. The latter is the attraction for a growing number of foreign tourists who come to Brazil looking for sex, and in many cases they are willing to pay for it. There is a growing demand, mostly from Germans, Italians and other Europeans. They come here not for the culture and beaches, but for sex, often with mi- nors. The age of consent in Brazil is 18, but many of those at work here are much younger. Recife’s secretary for tourism, Romeo Ba- tista, says the long-term antidote to the sex trade lies in better social policies so that Brazilian girls have less need for foreign men and money. But on the question of shortterm solutions, he was somewhat defensive: “Prostitutes exist everywhere - look at Paris for example. Here they just happen to work in highly visible areas, and it’s not just a question of getting them off the streets. You have to detain their clients, which is why we’ve installed cameras which also help reduce violence.” DISPONÍVEL EM: <HTTP://NEWS.BBC.CO.UK/2/HI/ AMERICAS/4061325. STM>. ACESSO EM: 17 MAR. 2010. (ADAPTADO). 7. (UEG) De acordo com o conteúdo do texto, é CORRE- TO afirmar que o turismo sexual: a) é praticado por turistas asiáticos e europeus em visita ao Brasil. b) é a principal causa de prostituição infantil em paí- ses da Ásia e no Brasil. c) deve ser combatido com medidas que terão efeito somente a longo prazo. d) na opinião do Secretário de Turismo do Recife, po- deria ser combatido pela adoção de políticas sociais. 8. (Fuvest) We live in a highly technological society. It _ (1)_ for mankind some of the most intricate and beauti- fully discriminating machines ever seen as well as some of the most powerful. What modern medicine has been able _(2)_ to cope with certain diseases _(3)_ to earlier generations truly miraculous. (DIALOGUE 2, 1992). Qual a sequência que preenche corretamente os espa- ços numerados? a) (1) had devised, (2) to do, (3) will be seem. b) (1) has devised, (2) to do, (3) will be seem. c) (1) has been devised, (2) to be doing, (3) would have seemed. d) (1) has devised, (2) to do, (3) would have seemed. e) (1) was devising, (2) to do, (3) will have seem. 9. (EPCAR) When football _____ professional in South Africa in 1959, 12 clubs broke from the amateur ranks. However, in the strict days of Apartheid, these pioneers _____ whites-only organizations and _____ today, all but a few, defunct. One of the survivors is Arcadia from Tshwane/ Pretoria, an outfit that today competes in the amateurranks and concentrates on junior football. Mark the alternative which completes the gaps from the text correctly. a) had gone – have been – were b) went – were – are c) have been – have been – would be d) was – had been – will be TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO “You have to motivate yourself with challenges. That’s how you know you’re still alive. Once you start doing only what you _(I)_ you can do, you _(II)_ on the road to death.” JERRY SEINFELD 10. (Mackenzie) The verb forms that correctly complete the blanks I and II in the quotation are: a) should have proved, will be b) had proven, would be c) have proven, are d) may have proven, can be e) will be proving, will have been A.P.A. Complementar TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 6 QUESTÕES DO PEOPLE ONLY USE 10 PERCENT OF THEIR BRAINS? BY ROBYNNE BOYD The human brain is complex. Along with performing millions of mundane acts, it composes concertos, issues manifestos and co- mes up with elegant solutions to equations. It’s the wellspring of all human feelings, behaviors, experiences as well as the reposi- tory of memory and self-awareness. So it’s no surprise that the brain remains a mystery unto itself. Adding to that mystery is the contention that humans “only” em- ploy 10 percent of their brain. If only regular folk could tap that other 90 percent, they too could become savants who remember 91 to the twenty thousandth decimal place or perhaps even have telekinetic powers. Though an alluring idea, the “10 percent myth” is so wrong it is almost laughable, says neurologist Barry Gordon at Johns Ho- pkins School of Medicine in Baltimore. Although there’s no de- finitive culprit to pin the blame on for starting this legend, the notion has been linked to the American psychologist and author William James, who argued in The Energies of Men that “We are making use of only a small part of our possible mental and physical resources.” It’s also been associated with Albert Einstein, who supposedly used it to explain his cosmic towering intellect. The myth’s durability, Gordon says, stems from people’s concep- tions about their own brains: they see their own shortcomings as evidence of the existence of untapped gray matter. This is a false assumption. What is correct, however, is that at certain moments in anyone’s life, such as when we are simply at rest and thinking, we may be using only 10 percent of our brains. “It turns out though, that we use virtually every part of the brain, and that most of the brain is active almost all the time,” Gordon adds. “Let’s put it this way: the brain represents three percent of the body’s weight and uses 20 percent of the body’s energy.” Although it’s true that at any given moment all of the brain’s re- gions are not concurrently firing, brain researchers using imaging technology have shown that, like the body’s muscles, most are continually active over a 24-hour period. (WWW.SCIAM.COM/ARTICLE. FEBRUARY 7, 2008. ADAPTADO.) 1. (Unifesp) Segundo o neurologista Barry Gordon: a) A relação entre o peso e a energia consumida pelo cérebro é semelhante à dos outros órgãos. b) O cérebro é um músculo que deve ser exercitado sem interrupção. c) A energia consumida pelo cérebro varia de 10% a 90%, dependendo do peso do cérebro. d) William James estava correto em associar Einstein à maior utilização da potencialidade cerebral. e) Grande parte do cérebro fica ativa quase o tempo todo. 2. (Unifesp) The human brain: a) is employed about 10% of the time in its full capacity. b) could use 90% of its energy in future, after addi- tional research. c) may be used at only 10% of its full potential in certain situations. d) is highly demanded by people who have an extra- ordinary memory for numbers. e) was much more active in scientists like Albert Eins- tein and William James. 3. (Unifesp) The statement by William James – “We are making use of only a small part of our possible mental and physical resources.” a) agrees with Einstein’s theories. b) supports the 10 percent myth. c) confirms Barry Gordon’s ideas. d) is an argument against the complexity of the brain. e) demonstrates that the brain is a God’s mystery. 4. (Unifesp) No trecho do segundo parágrafo – “they too could become savants who remember to the twenty thou- sandth decimal place or perhaps even have telekinetic powers.” –, a palavra PERHAPS significa, em português: a) exceto. b) até. c) portanto. d) talvez. e) certamente. 5. (Unifesp) No trecho do terceiro parágrafo - “It’s also been associated with Albert Einstein, who supposedly used it to explain his cosmic towering intellect.” –, a letra S em IT’S indica a forma verbal: a) is. b) were. c) has. d) was. e) had. 6. (Unifesp) No trecho do último parágrafo – “like the body’s muscles” –, a palavra LIKE indica: a) semelhança. b) exemplificação. c) generalização. d) probabilidade. e) contraste. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO METHODS OF INSTRUCTION Curiously, 2universities 3are very anxious to do research on every institution in society except 1themselves. They know 5a lot about how smart students are on arrival, but very little about how much 4has been learned by graduation time. Because edu- cators do not investigate how well they teach or how much students learn, they do not have any process of trial and error by which to improve methods of instruction. And so teaching remains one of the few human activities that does not get de- monstrably better from one 7generation to the 6next. 7. (Unb) Marque V (verdadeiro) ou F (falso) para cada uma das afirmações abaixo. ( ) “themselves” (ref.1) refers to “universities” (ref.2) ( ) “are very anxious” (ref.3) the same as ARE VERY EAGER ( ) “has been” (ref.4) is a perfect form ( ) “a lot” (ref.5) can be correctly substituted by A GREAT DEAL ( ) “next” (ref.6) refers to “generation” (ref.6) TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO LONG LIVE LIFE! “Children born today will be able to live to 130 because of medi- cal advances. For the first time, scientists __________ the extra years that breakthroughs in human genetics, organ cloning and the biology of ageing will add to people’s lifespans.” 92 They believe that by 2050, scientific advances __________ 50 years to the current average of 75 for men and 79 for women, precipitating radical changes in the way people live, plan their careers, spend their leisure time and raise families.” FROM: LONG LIVE LIFE!. SPEAK UP. XII, 149, OCTOBER 1999, PAGE 8. 8. (UFPE) Fill in the blanks with the correct choice. a) is quantified, has been adding b) are quantified, has added c) have quantified, will be adding d) has quantified, is adding e) was quantified, would add TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO The Fear Is Old The Economy New BY THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN There is something perverse about reading the business news these days. Every month the Labor Department comes out with a new set of statistics about how unemployment is down and thousands of jobs are being created. But these stories always contain the same 2caveat, like the warning on a pack of cigaret- tes, that this news is bad for the health of the economy. The sto- ries always go on to say that these great employment statistics triggered panic among Wall Street investors and led to a sell off of stocks and bonds. (...) Of course there has always been a link between unemployment numbers and inflation expectations. The more people are working, the more they have the money to pay for things; the more consu- mer demand outstrips factory capacity, the more prices shoot up, and the more prices shoot up the more the value of bonds, with their fixed interest rates, erodes. But what has been so frustrating about the market reactions in recent months is that despite the surging economy, inflation has not been rising. It has remained flat, at around 3 percent, and 1yet Wall Street, certain that the shadow it sees is the ghost of higher inflation come to haunt the trading floors, has been cla- moring to the Federal Reservefor higher rates. (...) THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE. MAY 22, 1994. 9. (Ita) O que determinou a utilização do Present Perfect Tense no último parágrafo do texto foi: a) o estilo do autor. b) a referência a um tempo passado não explicitado no texto. c) a referência a acontecimentos / sentimentos desen- cadeados no passado e que continuam no presente. d) a atribuição de maior ênfase ao que se pretende dizer. e) a referência a sentimentos / acontecimentos que ocorrem no presente. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO TEXT II BLAME MALE TREES FOR YOUR ALLERGIES Scientists think they have found what causes people to sneeze and suffer runny noses and itchy eyes. Tom Ogren, a California horticulturalist, suggests that we may suffer allergies because in cities, we plant male trees along streets. Male trees are chosen over females because the latter produce seed pods and fruits that need to be cleaned up. Male plants don’t require such mainte- nance, but they produce great amounts of pollen, and the pollen is what causes the hay fever reactions in many people. BLAME MALE TREES FOR YOUR ALLERGIES. SPEAK UP MAGAZINE. SÃO PAULO: CAMELOT, FEB. 2001, P. 37. 10. (UFRRJ) The sentence “Scientists think they have found what causes people to sneeze...”, is equivalent to: a) what causes people to sneeze is founded by scientists. b) what causes people to sneeze were found by scientists. c) what causes people to sneeze has been found by scientists. d) what causes people to sneeze was found by scientists. e) what are the causes of sneezing by people. A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. Nas frases a seguir, os verbos em parênteses devem ser escritos em simple past ou em past perfect. Leia-as e escolha entre as duas formas. O primeiro item já foi resolvido para você. a) Jill had phoned (to phone) Dad at work before she left (to leave) for her trip. b) Sarah __________ (to turn on) the radio after she __________ (to wash) the dishes. c) When she __________ (to arrive) the game __________ already __________ (to start). d) After the woman __________ (to come) home she __________ (to feed) the cat. e) Before he __________ (to sing) a song he __________ (to play) the guitar. f) She __________ (to watch) a video after the chil- dren __________ (to go) to bed. g) I __________ (to be) very tired because I __________ (to study) too much. 2. Nas frases a seguir, os verbos em parênteses devem ser escritos em present perfect ou em past perfect. Leia-as e escolha entre as duas formas. O primeiro item já foi resolvido para você. a) When I went to the car park, I found that my car had been stolen. (to steal) b) Joseph __________ in Paris for 4 years before he could speak French fluently. (to live) c) I __________ German for 5 years now. (to learn) d) The locals were amazed because they __________ a camel before. (never, to see). e) They wouldn’t let him in because he __________ his membership card. (to forget) f) They said: ‘You can’t come in because you __________ your membership card.’ (to forget) g) __________ the new film by Fellini? (you, to see) 93 h) They __________ a lot of champagne by the time the party ended. (to drink) i) They were angry because they __________ for too long. (to wait) 3. Escolha um verbo que complete adequadamente as lacunas, e grafe-o em uma das seguintes formas: pres- ent perfect or simple past. O primeiro item já foi resolvi- do para você. a) John played football yesterday. b) They __________ the car. It looks new again. c) Last year we __________ to Italy. d) Bill and Susan __________ the book. Now they can watch the film. e) I __________ my friend three days ago. f) We __________ another country before. g) She __________ a new car in 2013. h) I’m sorry, but I __________ my homework. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO FASHION: BYE BYE, BARBIE The new breed of Brazilian beauty BY MAC MARGOLIS It’s hard to imagine, but Suyane Moreira didn’t always like what she saw in the mirror. Sure, she was pretty enough, the sort of pretty that can stop a conversation. And with her cinnamon skin, the curtain of raven hair and deep, black, come-hither eyes, who wouldn’t notice? But until recently Moreira mostly saw what wa- sn’t there. “I wanted to be blond and blue-eyed”, she says. Her girlhood idol was Xuxa, the wildly popular children’s TV-show host, and Brazil’s answer to Barbie. No longer. Ever since she started strutting for Ford Models late last year, this reedy youngster from a drowsy village in northeas- tern Brazil has refashioned her attitude. Moreira, who turns 19 in September, has posed for Italian Vogue and the British fashion bible ID and will soon debut on catwalks at New York and Lon- don. She knows it’s a steep climb to that glamorous world where Brazilian übermodel Gisele reigns. But when Moreira consults the looking glass these days, she sees what was there all along: a striking young woman whose burnished skin and angular fea- tures tell of deep indigenous roots. “I am proud to be Indian”, she told NEWSWEEK recently. “I like the way I look”. In Brazil’s complicated social taxonomy, Moreira is a “cafuza” − the pro- geny of African and Indian ancestors. Her late father, a nightclub singer, was black. Her mother is a descendant of full-blooded na- tive Brazilians − which native Brazilians isn’t clear. The genealogy died with Moreira’s great-grandmother, who - family legend has it − was stolen from the cradle by white hunters on the Serra do Cariri, a scarp named after a bygone Indian nation. Native Brazilians have always inflamed the national imagina- tion, either as menaces or mascots. For nearly 300 years, when they outnumbered the European colonists, they were seen ei- ther as barbarians at the gate or as Christians in the rough. Many massacres later, when they were no longer a threat, they could be safely resurrected as cultural icons and even heroes. Does Moreira’s rise represent ethnic pride or opportunism? Has the fashion industry struck a blow for tolerance or found a pretty new product for the ethnic market? There’s room for skepticism, but marketing “Indianness” is itself proof of changing attitudes. Moreira is not about to shed her heels to return to the reservation, but she no longer fancies becoming a Brazilian Barbie. “I have a dream”, she confesses. “I’d love to spend some days with an Indian tribe, learning their dances and eating their food”. Which tribe? “I’m not sure”, she says, flicking her jet hair and flashing a camera-ready grin. There won’t be any lack of invitations. NEWSWEEK Glossary strutting: desfilar reedy: esbelta catwalks: passarelas übermodel: topmodel progeny: descendência bygone: extinta menaces: ameaças in the rough: em potencial rise: ascenção struck a blow for: ser a favor defender to shed her heels: abandonar seus saltos altos Read the text and answer the following questions in English. 4. (UFF) Qual é a mudança principal observada na atitu- de de Suyane em relação a sua própria aparência? 5. (UFF) Find in the text two different uses of the pres- ent perfect: a) one referring to an indefinite point in the past; b) another which includes the present time. Gabarito Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. B 2. A 3. A 4. D 5. E 6. C 7. B 8. C 9. C 10. D A.P.A. Fixação 1. D 2. E 3. B 4. D 5. E 6. D 7. D 8. D 9. B 10. C A.P.A. Complementar 1. E 2. B 3. B 4. D 5. C 6. A 7. V – V – V – V – V 8. C 9. C 10. C 94 A.P.A.Dissertativo 1. a) Já resolvido. b) turned on – had washed c) arrived – had already started d) had come – fed e) sang – had played f) watched – had gone g) was – had studied 2. a) Já resolvido. b) had lived c) have learned d) had never seen e) had forgotten f) forgot g) have you seen h) had drunk i) had waited 3. a) Já resolvido. b) have washed c) went d) have read e) saw f) haven’t visited g) bought h) haven’t done 4. Suyane Moreira desejava ser loura e ter olhos azuis quando era criança. Atualmente, ela se mostraorgulhosa de sua origem e aparência indígena. 5. a) has posed has struck – found b) Has refashioned – Have always inflamed 95 1. Prepositions Prepositions são palavras que, como consta no próprio nome, antecedem algum pronome ou substantivo. As pre- posições são utilizadas para associar algum conceito ao termo que está ligado. A exemplo da maior parte dos temas estudados em uma língua estrangeira, a tradução pura e simples pode provo- car uma confusão com a perda do sentido dos conceitos, mesmo quando a tradução parece simples e direta. Para evitar dúvidas, serão analisadas as prepositions presentes na língua inglesa divididas em grupos por uso e conceitos. Observe alguns exemplos: 1.1. Prepositions in / on / at para tempo e espaço FONTE: YOUTUBE English grammar: The prepositions ON, AT, IN, BY F Y multimídia: vídeo Essas três prepositions seguem uma regra de hierarquia no que diz respeito a tempo e lugar. Nesses casos, IN refere-se ao maior, ON a um nível intermediário e AT ao nível específi- co, podendo ser diagramado desta forma: IN ON AT LUGAR País, cidade, bairro Séculos, décadas, anos estação do ano, meses Ruas e avenidas Dias da semana, finais de semana, datas Lugar específico Tempo específico, hora exata, feriados TEMPO Exemplos: I live IN France. IN We are IN the Summer. I’ll meet you ON Paulista Av ON See you ON Wednesday. I study AT Hexag AT The class starts AT 7 pm. Exceções: Quando referimo-nos aos períodos do dia, o uso é diferen- ciado. Veja os exemplos: In the mornings at night In the afternoon at dusk In the evenings at dawn 1.1.1 Prepositions para posições A seguir, será observado o uso de prepositions em relação aos níveis hierárquicos de posições. Eles serão escalonados da seguinte maneira: ABOVE ON IN UNDER BELOW ABOVE é utilizado para indicar o que está no alto, em opo- sição ao BELOW, que é utilizado para indicar aquilo que está por baixo. ON também indica posição superior, assim como UNDER indica posição inferior. No entanto, ON e UNDER diferenciam-se de ABOVE e BELOW, pois ambos são usados quando há alguma superfície de referência, de acordo com o exemplo: The Book is ON/UNDER the table. O livro pode estar em cima ou embaixo da mesa. Essas pre- positions são usadas aqui, pois estão usando a superfície da mesa como referência. O mesmo não pode ser dito do avião ou do submarino, por exemplo: The plane is ABOVE us. The submarine is BELOW the sea. PREPOSITIONS HABILIDADES: 1, 4, 5, 7, 8, 21 e 25 COMPETÊNCIAS: 1, 2, 7 e 8 CLASS 9 96 Ambos não possuem uma referência de superfície, portanto utiliza-se ABOVE/BELOW em lugar de ON/ UNDER. A preposition IN indica que o pronome ou substativo está posicionado dentro de algo, como no exemplo: The wallet is IN the bag. ATENÇÃO: Repare que as prepositions IN e ON foram utilizadas aqui com um conceito totalmente oposto do an- terior. Preste atenção para os usos e não para a tradução simplesmente. Outras referências de posição: around, among, between,before e after AROUND: é utilizado para indicar proximidade ou apro- ximação. She works AROUND here. (Ela trabalha por aqui/ aqui perto). That bag costs AROUND 70 dollars.(Aquela bol- sa custa por volta de 70 dólares). AMONG: utiliza-se para indicar algo que está no meio de outras coisas ou pessoas. I am very excited to be here AMONG my family. (Estou muito animado de estar aqui entre minha familia.). BETWEEN: utiliza-se para indicar algo ou alguém que está posicionado entre duas coisas ou pessoas. Can you see me? I am here BETWEEN gates 7 and 8. BEFORE: utiliza-se para indicar referência anterior. I hope to solve this BEFORE Monday. (Espero resolver isso até segunda). AFTER: utiliza-se para indicar referência posterior. I will check this just AFTER my vacations. (Eu ve- rificarei isso apenas após minhas férias). FONTE: YOUTUBE Preposições em inglês » Regras e dicas definitivas F Y multimídia: vídeo Um caso específico: over A preposition OVER tem larga utilização. O primeiro con- ceito a se associar a OVER é a ideia de acima do limite ou capacidade. No entanto, essa preposição também é utili- zada para posição superior de forma muito semelhante ao ABOVE. Veja os exemplos: This painting should be placed OVER my bed. (Este quadro/pintura deve ser colocado em cima da minha cama). I will lay me down like a bridge OVER troubled waters. (Eu me estenderei ao seu lado como uma ponte sobre águas turbulentas). Please, slow down! Don’t drive OVER the limit. (Vá devagar, por favor! Não dirija acima do limite de velocidade). 1.1.2. Prepositions de relação Aqui aparecem algumas preposições que costumam ser confusas, uma vez que a tradução não ajuda. Observe os exemplos considerando mais uma vez os conceitos. TO: refere-se a destino. I am travelling TO Rio. (Estou viajando para o Rio). We should go TO his birthday party. (Devemos ir ao aniversário dele). FOR: refere-se a período de tempo ou propósito. They lived FOR twenty years. (Eles viveram por vinte anos). ATENÇÃO: tanto FOR quanto TO são utilizados para finali- dade. A diferença do uso de ambos se dá quanto ao termo que antecedem. Antes de PRONOME ou SUBSTANTIVO, usa-se FOR: This money is FOR her education. (Este dinheiro é para a educação dela). I brought this donut FOR you. (Trouxe este bolinho pra você). Antes de VERBO, usa-se TO: We need all the team to deal with the situation. (Precisamos de toda a equipe pra lidar com a si- tuação). FROM: usado sempre para origem. I am FROM Brazil (Eu sou do Brasil). BY: Indica autoria ou ferramenta. This song was written BY Lennon and McCartney. (Esta é uma canção escrita por Lennon e McCartney). 97 This was all made BY hand (Isso foi tudo feito à mão) OF: indica posse ou vinculação. There songs are some OF the Brazilian classics. (Es- tas canções são alguns dos clássicos brasileiros). ABOUT: referência ou proximidade. They are talking ABOUT politics. (Eles estão falando de política). This book will cost ABOUT 20 dollars. (Este livro vai custar em torno/por volta de 20 dólares). WITH: utiliza-se para indicar companhia, proximidade. I can prepare the samples WITH this equipment. (Eu posso preparar as amostras com este equi- pamento). WITHOUT: utiliza-se para indicar ausência ou separação. We can live WITHOUT it. (Podemos viver sem isto). UP: utiliza-se para indicar movimento ascendente. Go UP the stairs then you can take the bus there. (Suba as escadas e daí você poderá pegar o ônibus por lá). DOWN: utiliza-se para indicar movimento descendente. Climb DOWN the stairs then you reach the pla- tform. (Desça as escadas e daí você chegará na plataforma). THROUGH: utiliza-se para expressar movimento em que passamos por dentro ou através de algo. Walk THROUGH the door, please. (Vá por aque- la porta, por favor). The lights are passing THROUGH the crack. (As luzes estão passando por entre/através a fenda). THROUGHOUT: utiliza-se para expressar períodos de tempo ou áreas. The flu epidemic scared the population THROU- GHTOUT the last century. (A epidemia de gripe apavorou a população no decorrer do último século). There have been cases of Covid-19 throughout the globe. DURING: utiliza-se para expressar períodos de tempo. The houses on the hill were destroyed DURING the last rain.(As casas na colina foram destruídas durante a última chuva). SINCE: utiliza-se para expressar origem ou início. I work here SINCE 2015. Obs.: SINCE também é uma conjunção condicional, ou seja, você poderá encontrar since em outras orações com sentido diferente do utilizado como preposição, por exemplo: SINCE she is not coming, we can go home now. (Uma vez que ela não virá, nós podemos ir pra casa agora). UNTIL: utiliza-se para indicar limite de tempo. Don’t start UNTIL everyone arrives. (Não come- cem até que todos cheguem). FONTE: YOUTUBE Prepositions in Time Expressions - English Grammar & Speaking Lesson F Y multimídia: vídeo TOWARDS:utiliza-se para expressar direção ou intenção. Please walk TOWARDS him to get what are you looking for. (Por favor, vá até ele para obter o que procura). INTO: é uma junção de IN com TO. Utiliza-se para indicar movimento para dentro de algo: John walked INTO the church to take shelter from the rain. (John entrou na igreja para se abri- gar da chuva). ONTO: é uma junção de ON com TO. Utiliza-se para indicar movimento também, porém com a ideia de superfície do ON. Jack was tired and fell ONTO his bed. (Jack esta- va cansado e desabou em sua cama). ACROSS: indica que algo está do lado oposto, especial- mente usando algo como referência. The drugstore is ACROSS the street. (A farmácia está do outro lado da rua). AGAINST: É utilizada para expressar contrariedade. He never does anything AGAINST the law. (Ele nunca faz nada contra a lei). 1.1.3. Indefinite pronouns Ainda que existam entendimentos diferentes em relação aos indefinite pronouns, é comum serem listados os seguintes: some, any, every, no e none. 98 Some algum(ns), alguma(s); só pode ser usado em afir- mativas e perguntas. Exemplos: Some animals are in danger of extinction. (Al- guns animais estão em perigo de extinção). Some rest may be good for you. (Algum descanso pode ser bom para você. Any pode ser usado em qualquer tipo de frase, adquirin- do sentidos diferentes em cada uma. Na afirmativa, "qual- quer"; na negativa, "nenhum"; na pergunta, "algum". Exemplos: Any student knows the answer for that ques- tion. (Qualquer estudante sabe a resposta para esta pergunta). You can pick any of those grapes. (Você pode es- colher qualquer uma daquelas uvas). Every todas, todos. Exemplos: Every good player has a good coach. (Todo bom jogador tem um bom técnico). Every city in this country has that kind of problem. (Toda/Qualquer cidade deste país enfrenta este tipo de problema). No nenhum; mas somente em frases onde a negação seja feita com o pronome e não com o verbo auxiliar. Exemplos: We have no money to buy a house. (Nós não te- mos dinheiro para comprar uma casa). No job is forever (Nenhum emprego é para sempre). None Nenhum, nada, ninguém (como substantivo). Exemplos: Half a meal is better than none. (Meia refeição é melhor do que nenhuma); He is very proud and will be second to none. (Ele é muito orgulhoso e não vai se subjugar a ninguém). 1.1.4. Compounds Os indefinite pronouns, vistos anteriormente, podem apa- recer combinados com as palavras body/one (pessoas); thing (coisas); where (lugares); time (momento, instante) e way/how (modo, maneira). Veja a seguir os resultados desses compounds (compostos): Somebody (alguém), anybody (qualquer um), nobody (ninguém), everybody (todos, todo mundo); Someone (alguém), anyone (qualquer um), no one (ninguém), everyone (todos, cada um deles); Something (algo, alguma coisa), anything (qualquer coi- sa), nothing (nada), everything (tudo, todas as coisas); Somewhere (em algum lugar), anywhere (em qualquer lugar), nowhere (em lugar nenhum), everywhere (em todos os lugares); Sometime (em algum momento), anytime (a qualquer momento), every time (todas as vezes, sempre); Someway/somehow (de algum modo/jeito), anyway/ anyhow (de qualquer modo/maneira), no way (de jeito nenhum), everyway (em todos os sentidos, de todo modo). Apêndice: Double Negatives Na língua inglesa, a ocorrência de duas negativas na mes- ma frase é um erro grave, sendo um assunto bem explorado pelos vestibulares. Os exemplos a seguir não pertencem à norma culta, ainda que possam ocorrer no inglês coloquial. Preposições e partículas adverbiais em inglês – Ana Masakos Haraguchi Essa obra foi desenvolvida com o intuito de cobrir lacu- nas no ensino da leitura em Inglês. O foco é na habilida- de de compreensão e interpretação textual, deixando de lado a expressão e a compreensão oral. multimídia: livro Exemplos: I don’t know nothing about it. She doesn’t want nothing to eat. I can’t see nobody. Existem duas possibilidades para que os erros acima sejam removidos. Observe-as a seguir: 99 Exemplos: I don’t know anything about it./ I know nothing about it. She doesn’t want anything to eat/ She wants no- thing to eat I can’t see anybody/ I see nobody. A solução mais usual é a primeira delas. Substitua os com- postos formados por no pelos compostos formados por any. 2. The evolution of monkeys remains a mystery HTTPS://WWW.ECONOMIST.COM/SCIENCE-AND-TECHNOLOGY/2019/03/14/ THE-EVOLUTION-OF-MONKEYS-REMAINS-A-MYSTERY. MAR 14TH 2019 Why monkeys and apes took separate evolutionary paths has long been a mystery. One widely held theory is that en- vironmental changes that led to more open habitats drove a wedge between these animals, leading the ancestors of monkeys to make do with a less nutritious diet of leaves and those of modern apes to thrive upon fruits and seeds. A study led by John Kappelman of the University of Texas and the late David Rasmussen of Washington University, published this week in PNAS, suggests that this idea is wrong. There are few vertebrate groups that have a worse fossil re- cord than monkeys. Fossils form best when animals die in places where sediment is constantly being deposited to cover up their bones, like streams, river deltas, coastlines and sand dunes. Because monkeys typically live in lush forests where sediment is rarely deposited, they rarely fossilise. Indeed, while genetic analysis of modern species makes it clear that they diverged from apes 30m years ago, evidence of their first 12m years of existence has until now been composed of just two molars that are too worn to show much detail. A new fossil discovered in Nakwai, Kenya by a team of Ken- yan and American scientists has now been dated as being 22m years old. Composed of several jaw fragments with well-preserved teeth still stuck in their sockets, the fossil clearly belonged to a monkey. Yet the specimen has raised more questions than it has answered because it lacks an important dental trait known as bilophodonty. Best described as teeth that have crests running between their cusps, bilophodont molars are found in all members of the old world monkey family and play a pivotal part in helping these animals to chew leaves efficiently. Because the Kenyan fossil does not have these crests, Dr Kappelman and his colleagues believe it was much more likely to have fed on fruits and seeds. That goes against the prevailing theory that leaves became a major part of the monkey diet after their split from apes 30m years ago. Although Alophia, as the researchers have named the fossil, may just be an odd early monkey lineage that broke from its kin and later started eating fruit, it is also possible that this animal had teeth that were typical for monkeys of the time. If so, the monkey puzzle deepens: something other than a taste for leaves must have led them away from apes. www.discovermagazine.com multimídia: site Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. Choose the best alternative for the following ques- tion. The soccer player was ejected because he had done something that was ________ the rules. a) without b) outside c) against d) during e) up 2. Choose the best alternative for the following question. The animal hospital? It’s somewhere ________ that big blue building. a) around b) with c) on d) throughout e) until 3. Choose the best alternative for the following question. She’s the kind of girl who knows everything ________ everyone. a) about b) since c) in d) before e) after 4. Choose the best alternative for the following question. She is, ________ a doubt, the best student in the class. a) without b) inside 100 c) about d) towards e) at 5. Choose the best alternative for the following question. ________ our visit to Japan, we saw a lot of interesting places. a) While b) During c) Through d) Below e) since 6. Choose the best alternative for the following question. Don’ttry to hide _________ unsolved problems _________ the past. a) in/on b) of/from c) about/from d) from/of e) in/ from 7. Assinale a alternativa correta. Os 4,testes a seguir referem-se a Pronomes Indefinidos: I’ll have to find the money __________ in the room. I’m sure I put it in the drawer myself half an hour ago. a) somebody b) somewhere c) something d) somehow e) someone 8. She is used to taking notes. She knows __________ by heart. a) none b) no c) nothing d) none of e) nobody 9. All right, you can buy that toy, as long as you spend __________ more than US$ 10 on it. a) none b) no c) nowhere d) nobody e) no one 10. The teacher said that ____________ students could have had an “A”. a) none b) none of c) nobody d) no one e) none of the A.P.A. Fixação TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 5 QUESTÕES At one level, the computer is a tool. It helps us write, keep track of our accounts, and communicate with others. Beyond this, the computer offers us both new models of mind and a new medium on which to project our ideas and fantasies. Most recently, the computer has become even more than tool and mirror. We are able to step through the looking glass. We are learning to live in virtual worlds. We may find ourselves alone as we navigate virtu- al oceans, unravel virtual mysteries, and engineer virtual skyscra- pers. But increasingly, when we step through the looking glass, other people are there as well. The use of the term “cyberspace” to describe virtual worlds grew out of science fiction, but for many of us, cyberspace is now part of the routines of everyday life. When we read our electronic mail or send postings to an electronic bulletin bo- ard or make an airline reservation over a computer network, we are in cyberspace. In cyberspace, we can talk, exchange ideas, and assume personae of our own creation. We have the opportunity to build new kinds of communities, virtual communities, in which we participate with people from all over the world, people with whom we converse daily, peo- ple with whom we may have fairly intimate relationships but whom we may never physically meet. (SHERRY TURKLE, 1995. LIFE ON THE SCREEN: IDENTITY IN THE AGE OF THE INTERNET. TOUCHSTONE.) 1. (Unesp) A leitura do trecho selecionado nos permite concluir que, para a autora: a) nós nunca iremos aprender a viver em mundos vir- tuais porque eles são muito solitários. b) o computador, além de ferramenta e espelho, tam- bém nos dá acesso ao ciberespaço e possibilita nosso relacionamento com pessoas que talvez nunca encon- tremos pessoalmente. c) a comunicação face a face é totalmente desneces- sária uma vez que temos a oportunidade de construir comunidades virtuais. d) todos devem se refugiar no ciberespaço porque lá podem conversar com outras pessoas, trocar ideias e criar novas personalidades para si mesmos. e) o computador é um mal necessário nos dias de hoje porque precisamos ler mensagens eletrônicas e utilizar o ciberespaço para fazer compras e reservas. 2. (Unesp) Conforme o trecho apresentado, ciberespaço é: a) um termo que descreve mundos virtuais que cres- cem fora da ficção científica. b) o nome dado ao espaço ocupado por qual quer comunidade recém-formada. c) qualquer local em que podemos conversar e trocar ideias diariamente. d) um termo originário da ficção científica e usado para descrever mundos virtuais. e) o único espaço para se fazer reservas de passagens aéreas. 101 3. (Unesp) Segundo a autora, o computador é: a) uma ferramenta que nos ajuda a escrever, cuidar de nossas contas e entrar em contato com outras pessoas. Ele também é um espelho através do qual podemos projetar nossas ideias e fantasias. b) apenas uma ferramenta que nos ajuda a escrever, cuidar de nossas contas e entrar em contato com ou- tras pessoas. c) nada mais do que um espelho através do qual pro- jetamos nossas ideias e fantasias. d) apenas uma ferramenta que nos ensina a viver em mundos virtuais. e) apenas um espelho que nos permite perceber que estamos sozinhos, navegando em mundos virtuais. 4. (Unesp) After I read the text above, I could realize that my friend Christine has a terrible problem: She lives __________ 1204 Reality Boulevard but her husband lives _________ cyberspace! a) in ... in b) in ... on c) on ... at d) at ...on e) at ... in 5. (Unesp) As a tool, the computer assists ___________ to perform a lot of activities. a) we b) us c) ourselves d) they e) to us TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 2 QUESTÕES LONDON IN YOUR POCKET Smartphone applications are transforming the tourism experience. The latest development is called Streetmuseum, or “the museum in your pocket.” It can be downloaded __( I )__ any Iphone or Android tablet and it enables you to explore the streets of London, both past and present. Streetmuseum unites 200 images __( II )__ the Museum of London collection with actual locations __( III )__ the capital. It uses the smartphone’s geo-tagging facility: as you walk the streets of Lon- don, satellite technology will give the phone’s “geoposition.” The phone will produce an image of that place in the past and you can compare this with what you see there today. So far the app has been downloaded by __( IV )__ 150,000 people around the world. SKYLINE The collection shows how much the London skyline has changed __(V)__ recent decades. Until 1962 St Paul’s Cathedral (which was completed in 1710 and is 110 metres high) was London’s tallest building. Today that honour goes to “One Canada Square,” the Canary Wharf Tower in the Docklands. It is 230 metres high, but it will soon be overtaken __( VI )__ the 87-storey tower “Shard Lon- don Bridge,” which will be 310 metres high. Designed by architect Renzo Piano, it should be completed in May. 6. (Mackenzie) According to the text, a) streetmuseum can show you what London used to look like. b) the pictures shown in Streetmuseum can be down- loaded on any IPhone or Android tablet. c) the London skyline today is made up with the tall- est buildings in the world. d) the Canary Wharf Tower has been overtaken by the Shard London Bridge regarding their height. e) satellite technology has been used by more than 150,000 people in recent decades. 7. (Mackenzie) The prepositions that properly fill in blanks I, II, III, IV, V and VI, in the text, are: a) in / of / around / more / on / in b) for / from / in / than / on / by c) for / all around / through / about / about / for d) on / from / across / over / in / by e) out of / of / in / around / over / from TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 3 QUESTÕES Could You or Someone You Care About Have an Eating Disorder? In a culture where thinness is too often equated with physical attractiveness, success, and happiness, nearly everyone has dealt with issues regarding the effect their weight and body shape can have on their self-image. However, eating disorders are not about dieting or vanity; they’re complex psychological disorders in which an individual’s eating patterns are developed - and then habitually maintained - in an attempt to cope with other problems in their life. Each year, more than 5 million Americans are affected by serious and often life-threatening eating disorders such as anorexia nervo- sa, binge-eating, bulimia nervosa, compulsive eating, and obesity. 102 Left untreated, the emotional, psychological and physical conse- quences can be devastating, even fatal. Eating disorders know no class, cultural, or gender boundaries and can affect men, women, adolescents, and even children, from all walks of life. (EXTRAÍDO DE HTTP://WWW.EATING-DISORDER.COM/) 8. (Unesp) Indique a alternativa correta. a) Em uma cultura na qual a boa forma física está fre- quentemente associada à atração, ao sucesso e à feli- cidade, quase todos já lidaram com os efeitos de seu peso e da aparência de seu corpo em sua autoimagem. b) Distúrbios alimentares são alterações psicológicas complexas nas quais padrõesde alimentação são desenvolvidos e mantidos como forma de lidar com certos problemas. Relacionam-se, portanto, mais a uma dieta alimentar do que à vaidade pessoal. c) Embora vivamos em uma cultura em que a boa forma física está sempre associada ao sucesso e à felicidade, poucos se preocupam com os efeitos que seu peso e a aparência de seu corpo possam causar em sua autoimagem. d) Distúrbios alimentares são alterações psicológicas complexas nas quais padrões de alimentação são desenvolvidos e mantidos como forma de lidar com certos problemas. Portanto, relacionam-se a uma die- ta alimentar que afeta a vaidade pessoal. e) Embora nossa cultura não relacione a forma física à atração, ao sucesso e à felicidade, todos se preocu- pam com os efeitos que seu peso e a aparência de seu corpo possam causar em sua autoimagem. 9. (Unesp) Ao ilustrar os distúrbios alimentares, o texto 2: a) garante que eles não fazem distinção de classe, cul- tura e gênero; mas podem afetar, de modo diferencia- do, homens, mulheres, adolescentes e crianças, como confirmam os 5 milhões de americanos atingidos. b) afirma que eles podem atingir a todos, sem exce- ção, e que, na falta de tratamento, as consequências emocionais, psicológicas e físicas podem ser devasta- doras e, até mesmo, fatais. c) afirma que eles já atingiram 5 milhões de ame- ricanos que, por não receberem tratamento, sofrem consequências emocionais, psicológicas e físicas que podem ser devastadoras ou fatais. d) afirma que, a cada ano, eles afetam 5 milhões de ame- ricanos, perseguindo-os ao longo da vida. Como eles são deixados sem tratamento, acabam tendo consequências emocionais, psicológicas e físicas devastadoras. e) garante que eles podem atingir a todos, sem ex- ceção, e que, mesmo com tratamento, suas consequ- ências emocionais, psicológicas e físicas são sérias e acompanham os atingidos pela vida toda. 10. (Unesp) Eating disorders ___________ class, cultural, or gender boundaries. Therefore, they can affect ____________. a) knows no ... anyone. b) know no ... someone. c) know some ... nobody. d) can know ... nobody. e) don’t know any ... anyone. TEXTO PARA A PRÓXIMA QUESTÃO: A(s) questão(ões) a seguir está(ão) relacionada(s) ao texto abaixo. _____1_____ September 11, 2001, at 8:46 A.M., a hijacked air- liner crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center in New York. At 9:03 A.M. a second plane crashed into the south tower. The resulting infernos caused the buildings to collapse, 1the south tower after burning for an hour and two minutes, the north tower twenty-three minutes after that. 2The attacks were masterminded by Osama bin Laden in an attempt to intimidate the United States and unite Muslims for a restoration of the caliphate. 9/11, as the happenings of that day are now called, has set off debates on a vast array of topics. But I would like to explore a les- serknown debate triggered by it. Exactly how many events took place in New York on that morning _____2_____ September? 3It could be argued that the answer is one. The attacks on the two buildings were part of a single plan conceived by one man in service of a single agenda. They unfolded _____3_____ a few minutes and yards of each other, targeting the parts of a complex with a single name, design, and owner. And they launched a sin- gle chain of military and political events in their aftermath. Or it could be argued that the answer is two. The towers were distinct collections of glass and steel separated by an expanse of space, and they were hit at different times and went out of existence at different times. The amateur video that showed the second plane 4closing in on the south tower as the north tower billowed with smoke makes the twoness unmistakable: while one event was frozen in the past, the other loomed in the future. The gravity of 9/11 would seem to make this discussion frivolous to the point of impudence, a matter of mere “semantics,” as we say, with its implication of 5splitting hairs. But the relation of lan- guage to our inner and outer worlds is a matter of intellectual fascination and real-world importance. _____4_____ “importance” is often hard to quantify, _____5_____ this case I can put an exact value on it: 3,5 billion dollars. That was the sum in a legal dispute for the insurance payout to Larry Silverstein, the leaseholder of the World Trade Center site. Silverstein’s insurance policies stipulated a maximum reimbursement for each destructive “event.” If 9/11 comprised a single event, he stood to receive 3,5 billion dollars; if two, he stood to receive 7 billion. In the trials, the attorneys disputed the applicable meaning of the term event. The lawyers for the lea- seholder defined it in physical terms (two collapses); those for the insurance companies defined it in mental terms (one plot). There is nothing “mere” about semantics! ADAPTED FROM: PINKER, STEVEN. THE STUFF OF THOUGHT. NEW YORK: PENGUIN, 2007. P. 1-2. 11. (UFRGS 2018) Select the alternative that adequately fills in the gaps 1, 2, 3 and 5 in this same order. a) In – in – within – in b) In – on – from – at c) On – in – from – at d) On – on – from – at e) On – in – within – in 103 A.P.A. Complementar TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 5 QUESTÕES 1. (UERJ) Besides being funny, comics often expresses criticism. The comic strip criticizes men’s incapacity to take the following action: a) fight what baffles them b) confront what fools them c) resist what alienates them d) avoid what confuses them 2. (UERJ) Consider the visual representation of the tiger in the comic strip. The effect of closeness between the tiger and the view- er is obtained in the panel below: a) 5 b) 6 c) 7 d) 8 3. (UERJ) In the speech balloon of panel 1, the word that appears twice. The second that fulfils the following cohesive function: a) showing emphasis in speech b) refering back to the quotation c) pointing to the book in the picture d) linking main and subordinate clauses 4. (UERJ) And I should know. (panel 4) Modal verbs can be used to refer to a speaker’s attitude. The modal should indicates that Calvin believes his knowledge of the bad quality of the TV show would be characterized as: a) desirable b) probable c) surprising d) mandatory 5. (UERJ) By establishing links between different parts of a text, one might guess the meaning of an unknown word. Based on Calvin’s evaluation of the show he is watch- ing, the meaning of the word tripe, in panel 8, is: a) fun b) trash c) pastime d) program A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. Leia o texto abaixo e preencha as lacunas com as preposições que você considerar mais adequadas. Após realizar essa tarefa, vá até as respostas desta unidade e verifique se suas escolhas foram adequadas. Somente após terminar essa etapa responda com (C) certo ou (E) errado as afirmações da questão 2. Jan or Johannes Vermeer van Delft (1632– 1675), a Dutch genre painter who lived and worked _______ Delft all his life, created some _________ the most exquisite paintings ___________ Western art. His works are rare. ________ The 35 or 36 paintings generally attributed ________ him, most portray figures ________ interiors. All his works are admired ________ the sensitivity __________ which he rendered effects of light and color and __________ the poetic quality of his images. He produced me- ticulously constructed interiors ___________ just one or two figures — usually women. These are intimate genre paintings ___________ which the principal figure is invariably engaged in some everyday activity. Often the light enters Vermeer’s pain- tings ____________ a window. He was a master at depicting the way light illuminates objects. During the late 1650s, Vermeer began to place a new emphasis _____________ depicting figures within carefully composed interior spaces. Other Dutch painters painted similar scenes, but they were less concerned _____________ the articulation of the space than with thedescription of the figures and their actions. Little is known for certain about Vermeer’s life and career. Not much is known about Vermeer’s apprenticeship as an artist ei- ther. After his death, Vermeer was overlooked _____________ all but the most discriminating collectors and art historians for more than 200 years. His few pictures were attributed to other artists. Only after 1866, when the French critic W. Thore-Burger ‘rediscovered’ him, did Vermeer’s works become widely known and his works heralded as genuine Vermeer. 2. Judge the items that follow according to the text above. (C/E) a) ( ) It took around two centuries for Vermeer’s pain- tings to be attributed to him again. b) ( ) Some of Vermeer’s paintings are considered strange. c) ( ) Even though there were just a few of them, Ver- meer’s paintings proved to be very influential in the history of Dutch painting. d) ( ) Whenever Vermeer’s paintings portray human figures, these individuals are shown performing ordinary tasks. e) ( ) Vermeer got his inspiration from poems about women. f) ( ) Vermeer paid meticulous attention to the scenery in his paintings. 104 g) ( ) Light did not play a significant role in Vermeer’s paintings. h) ( ) Vermeer gave greater emphasis to interior spac- es than other painters did. i) ( ) Vermeer’s life and work history were widely doc- umented. j) ( ) Vermeer was neglected by most collectors and art historians after he died. Leia o texto a seguir e responda à pergunta 3 em PORTUGUÊS. This is a story about four people: Everybody, Somebody, Anybo- dy and Nobody. There was an important job to be done and everybody was sure that somebody would do it. Anybody could have done it, but nobody did. Somebody got angry about that because it was Everybody’s job. Everybody thought anybody could do it, but nobody realized that everybody wouldn’t do it. It ended up that everybody blamed somebody when nobody did what anybody could have done. 3. A partir da leitura do texto acima, é possível chegar a duas conclusões sobre a realização do trabalho citado. Cite essas duas conclusões. 4. Fill in the gaps with one (or more) indefinite pronoun. a) Don’t blame yourself for the mistake. _________ is perfect. b) There is _______________ in your hair. I think it is a bug. c) I will search and find you _____________ you go. You can’t escape from me. d) Our holiday was perfect. _______________ went as we wished. e) ___________________ is safe from the flu. We can’t escape. f) He didn’t say ________________ useful. All nonsense. g) I would like to have ______________ to drink please. h) The police found the murder weapon _______ near the hut. In the woods. i) Can _______________ hear me? Is the re ________________ out there? j) I will do ________________ for you. You are my best friend. k) Why are you looking at me so angrily? I didn’t do ________________ wrong. l) Look I’ve found _________________ interesting here. Oh, it’s just a button. m) ________________ we did to rescue the dog was useful. It died. n) I would like to go __________________ peace- ful for my holiday. o) Say _________________. Don’t just look me in the eyes meaningfully. p) My dictionary was on the desk. ________________ has taken it. q) She did ____________________. She just slept all day long. r) There is ____________________ I can’t tell you. I will keep it as a secret all my life. s) I am _________________’s fool. I won’t do all the work alone. t) He was so helpful. He helped nearly _________ in the village. 5. Rewrite the following sentence keeping its original meaning a) I didn’t see a thing. b) The delegates could get nothing after the summit. c) They didn’t show anything new. d) Nothing was shown by anyone. Gabarito Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. C 2. A 3. A 4. A 5. B 6. D 7. B 8. C 9. B 10. E A.P.A. Fixação 1. B 2. D 3. A 4. E 5. B 6. A 7. D 8. A 9. B 10. E 11. E A.P.A. Complementar 1. C 2. C 3. B 4. A 5. B A.P.A. Dissertativo 1. Jan or Johannes Vermeer van Delft (1632– 1675), a Du- tch genre painter who lived and worked in Delft all his life, created some of the most exquisite paintings in Western art. His works are rare. Of the 35 or 36 paintings generally attri- buted to him, most portray figures in interiors. All his works are admired for the sensitivity with which he rendered effects of light and color and for the poetic quality of his images. He produced meticulously constructed interiors with just one or two figures — usually women. These are intimate genre paintings in which the principal figure is invariably engaged in some everyday activity. Often the light enters Vermeer’s paintings from a window. He was a master at depicting the way light illuminates objects. During the late 1650s, Vermeer began to place a new emphasis on depicting figures within carefully composed interior spaces. Other Dutch painters painted similar scenes, but they were less concerned with the articulation of the space than with the description of the figures and their actions. Little is known for certain about Vermeer’s life and career. Not much is known about Verme- er’s apprenticeship as an artist either. After his death, Vermeer was overlooked by all but the most discriminating collectors and art historians for more than 105 200 years. His few pictures were attributed to other artists. Only after 1866, when the French critic W. Thore-Burger ‘rediscovered’ him, did Vermeer’s works become widely known and his works heralded as genuine Vermeer. 2. a) E b) E c) E d) C e) E f) C g) E h) C i) E j) C 3. Conclusão 1: Uma pessoa chamada “Nobody” fez o trabalho. Conclusão 2: O trabalho não foi realizado. 4. a) Nobody b) Something c) Anywhere d) Everything e) Nobody f) Anything g) Something h) Somewhere i) Anybody/somebody – anyone j) Anything – everything k) Anything l) Something m) Nothing n) Somewhere o) Something p) Somebody/someone q) Nothing r) Nothing s) Nobody t) Everyone 5. a) I saw nothing/I didn’t see anything. b) The delegates got nothing.../ The delegates couldn’t get anything. c) They showed nothing new. d) Anyone showed nothing./ They showed nothing. 106 1. Conditional Sentences São frases que expressam o que deve acontecer para que outra coisa ocorra. Daí o nome, conditional sentence. If my sister sings, Mateus laughs. / Mateus laughs if my sister sings. If that bat appears, I will scream. / I’ll scream if that bat appears. Não importa a ordem em que as frases apareçam, a con- ditional clause expressa a condição que precisa ocorrer. A oração que mostra o resultado é chamada de result clause. Quando você opta por começar pela conditional clause, as duas devem vir separadas por uma vírgula. Não há necessi- dade da vírgula quando se começa pela result clause. 1.1. Condicionais Reais 1.1.1. Zero Conditional - Condicionais Factuais São as condicionais que falam de fatos genéricos ou de habituais. Fatos genéricos: são aqueles fatos que são verdade constantemente, pois normalmente são coisas básicas da natureza ou da ciência. If water boils, it evaporates Water evaporates if it boils. Fatos habituais: são aqueles fatos determinados por há- bitos e rotinas e não pela natureza ou pela ciência. If my mother video chats with my sister, she takes a million screenshots of my nephew. My mother takes a million screenshots of my nephew if she video chats with my sister. 1.1.2. First Conditional - Condicionais Futuras As first conditionals expressam uma condição que deve se cumprir no presente para que um resultado futuro ocorra. If we don’t leave soon, we’ll be late for the cere- mony. / We’ll be late for the ceremony if we don’t leave soon. If there is no food in the fridge I may order some- thing on iFood. / I may order something on iFood if there’s nothing in the fridge. A ideia de futuro pode estar vinculada a diferentes tipos de futuro. Pode-se falarde um futuro em que se está certo do que vai acontecer (will) ou de algo que pode ser que aconteça (may). Em geral, os estudantes se prendem a um só tipo de futuro (will) e se condicionam a pensar somente nele como futuro, ignorando as outras possibilidades. Para facilitar a compreensão do tema, é possível seguir uma certa "escala de probabilidade". will / be going to - certeza (resultado forte) If it rains, I will stay home should - provável que aconteça I should try learning German if I have a chance. may - tem chance If you say that to her, she may not like it. might / could - difícil de acontecer Did you know you could die if you eat too many apple seeds? 1.2. Condicionais Imaginárias São as frases que expressam condições que não são ver- dadeiras, são pouco prováveis ou impossíveis de acontecer. 1.2.1. Second Conditional - Condicionais Hipotéticas A second conditional é considerada uma condição imagi- nária, pois fala de uma situação hipotética. Em outras palavras, não se trata de uma situação real, embora seja teoricamente possível dadas as circunstâncias. If we were stronger, we could help you. / We could help you if we were stronger. If she were here, she would really enjoy this movie. / She would really enjoy this movie if she were here. DON'T FORGET HABILIDADES: 1, 8 e 30 COMPETÊNCIAS: 1, 2 e 9 CLASS 10 107 A idéia é falar de algo que não é verdade no momen- to, mas que, em dadas circunstâncias ideais, poderia ser. Por esse motivo nota-se o uso do verbo would, que expressa o futuro hipotético; ou o uso de could, que mostra uma pos- sibilidade menor. O uso de might também seria possível. 1.2.2. Third Conditional - Condicionais Impossíveis Essas orações têm esse nome por tratarem de situações que realmente não aconteceram e que não podem mais ser al- teradas. A situação não aconteceu e, ainda assim, há um re- sultado decorrente disso. (A não ser que seja inventada uma máquina do tempo. Douglas Adams discute as implicações da viagem no tempo na gramática no livro O restaurante no fim do universo, da série O Mochileiro das Galáxias.) A pessoa fala de uma situação que não foi real no passado e expressa qual teria sido o resultado decorrente dessa ação. If I had listened to you, I wouldn’t have had that problem. / I wouldn’t have had that problem if I had listened to you. If she hadn’t been wearing the seatbelt at the time of the accident she could have died. / She could have died if she hadn’t been wearing the seatbelt at the time of the accident. Ao expressar a condição, utiliza-se o passado perfeito para indicar o que não aconteceu; no resultado, por sua vez, uti- liza-se o futuro hipotético para expressar qual situação teria se tornado real caso a decisão tomada tivesse sido diferente. Pensando na estrutura Zero Conditional: If + oração com presente simples (põe vírgula) + Oração com presente simples Oração com presente simples (sem vírgula) + if + oração com presente simples. First Conditional: If + oração com presente simples (põe vírgula) + Oração com alguma forma de futuro. Oração com alguma forma de futuro (sem vírgula) + if + oração com presente simples. Second Conditional: If + oração com passado simples (põe vírgula) + Oração com would/could/might + base form Oração com would/could/might + base form (sem vírgula) + if + oração com passado simples. Third Conditional: If + oração com passado perfeito (põe vírgula) + Oração com would/could/might + have + participle. Oração com would/could/might + have + participle (sem vírgula) + if + oração com passado perfeito. Como é possível observar, em todas as orações há uma condi- ção e um resultado que depende dessas condição para ocorrer. 1.3. Time Clauses As times clauses são expressões utilizadas para expressar tempo em uma oração condicional. Isso significa que não é necessário recorrer ao uso de if constantemente. Tudo de- pende do que se quer dizer. Observe os exemplos: If I see Pedro, I’ll talk to him for you. When I see Pedro, I’ll talk to him for you. As soon as I see Pedro, I’ll talk to him for you. Perceba que, na primeira frase, não estou certo de que vou ver Pedro, mas se vê-lo, falarei com ele por você. Há uma chance que eu o veja. Já na segunda, eu estou certo de que o verei, pois disse que quando o ver falarei. É só questão de tempo. Já na última, quando uso as soon as, mostro que será uma coisa imediata. Há muitas outras time clauses, que serão vistas a seguir. Vale destacar que, depois de uma time clause, os verbos devem ser escritos no present simple, não importando que em português a ideia seja de futuro. Unless: usa-se essa expressão quando se deseja falar de algo que vai acontecer a não ser que algo ocorra. Ele é uma “forma negativa” do if. Unless you eat properly, you won’t get stronger. Veja como ela é muito parecida com uma frase negativa feita com if. If you don’t eat properly, you won’t get stronger. Veja outro exemplo: Don’t call me unless it’s very important. Don’t call me if it’s not important. As long as: às vezes é necessário impor condições especí- ficas para que algo aconteça, ou por limites numa situação. Nesses casos, a condição pode ser iniciada por as long as. Veja o exemplo do músico canadense Justin Bieber: As long as you love me, I’ll be your platinum, I’ll be your silver, I’ll be your gold. Basicamente o que ele diz é que o ato de ele ser valioso para ela (representado pelos metais preciosos na letra) está 108 estritamente vinculado à condição de ela amá-lo. Caso ela deixe de amá-lo, ele não mais será platina, prata ou ouro para ela. Pense em outra situação: sua mãe lhe diz que você só po- derá fazer pipoca para assistir a Shrek 2 exclusivamente se lavar a louça depois. You can make some popcorn as long as you wash the dishes later. Na série The Politician, da Netflix, o personagem de River Barkley diz: You don’t have to be a good person as long as you do good things. Recapitulando: IF: a conjunção mais comum. Expressa uma condição que pode, ou não, acontecer. WHEN, AS SOON AS, : ao usá-la você mostra ao interlo- cutor que não é questão de sorte ou chance, mas sim uma questão de tempo até algo acontecer. UNLESS: usa-se para mostrar qual a exceção à regra que você impôs como condição. . AS LONG AS: maneira de mostrar que o que esperamos depende exclusivamente de alguma ação que precisa ser cumprida. É possível incluir como time clauses expressões que sejam locuções adverbiais de tempo, como by the time the test is over (na hora que a prova acabar) ou right before you leave (logo antes de você sair). Exemplos: Pick me up when/as soon as you find a car. (Ve- nha me pegar assim que encontrar um carro) Tell me when the job ends. (Diga-me quando o trabalho acabar) They will wait here until I am ready to go. (Eles esperarão aqui até que eu esteja pronto para ir) Set off the alarm if anything unsual happens. (Dis- pare o alarme se qualquer coisa incomum acontecer) 2. If clauses Caso 1 Simple present combinado com futuro If you drive too fast, you will have problems. I don´t care whether you will visit us or not. Caso 2 Simple Past combinado com WOULD If I were you I would marry her. I had no idea whether you were Brazilian or Mexican. Caso 3 Past Perfect combinado com WOULD If I had read that book I would have recommen- ded to you. Whether she had quit her job or not she would- n´t tell us. FONTE: YOUTUBE Como usar o IF CLAUSE | IUPI Inglês Criativo F Y multimídia: vídeo 3. An Ancient Human Species Is Discovered in a Philippine Cave Archaeologists in Luzon Island have turned up the bones of a distantly related species, Homo luzonensis, further ex- panding the human family tree. APRIL 10, 2019 In a cave in the Philippines, scientists have discovered a new branch of the human family tree. At least 50,000 years ago, an extinct human species lived on what is now the island of Luzon, researchers report- ed on Wednesday. It’s possiblethat Homo luzonensis, as they’re calling the species, stood less than three feet tall. The discovery adds growing complexity to the story of hu- man evolution. It was not a simple march forward, as it once seemed. Instead, our lineage assumed an exuberant burst of strange forms along the way. Our species, Homo sapiens, now inhabits a comparatively lonely world. “The more fossils that people pull out of the ground, the more we realize that the variation that was present in the past far exceeds what we see in us today,” said Matthew 109 Tocheri, a paleoanthropologist at Lakehead University in Canada, who was not involved in the new discovery. In the early 2000s, Armand Salvador Mijares, a graduate student at the University of the Philippines, was digging at Callao Cave, on Luzon, for traces of the first farmers on the Philippines. Soon, he decided to dig a little deeper. Researchers on the Indonesian island of Flores had dis- covered the bones of an extraordinary humanlike species about 60,000 years old. The scientists named it Homo floresiensis. Some features were similar to ours, but in other ways Homo floresiensis more closely resembled other hominins (the term scientists use for modern humans and other spe- cies in our lineage). Homo floresiensis was able to make stone tools, for exam- ple. But the adults stood only three feet high and had tiny brains. This strange combination led to debates about who, exactly, were their ancestors. The oldest fossils of hominins, dating back over six million years, have all been found in Africa. For millions of years, hominins were short, small-brained, bipedaapes. Starting about 2.5 million years ago, one lineage of Af- rican hominins began to evolve new traits — a flatter face, bigger brains and a taller body, among other fea- tures. These hominins were the first known members of our own genus, Homo. Only later, about 1.8 million years ago, do the first fossils of Homo appear outside of Africa. One common species was Homo erectus, a species that spread to East and Southeast Asia. The youngest Homo erectus fossils, discovered in In- donesia, may be just 143,000 years old. Our own lineage kept evolving in Africa. Homo sapiens emerged about 300,000 years ago, and only 100,000 years ago did we start leaving the continent. By 50,000 years ago, our species had reached Australia. (Some researchers believe that date should be pushed back to 65,000 years ago.) One hypothesis, then, is that Homo floresiensis evolved from Homo erectus. So here was the question for Philip- pine archaeologists: Could hominins have reached Luzon as well as Flores? 4. Imperative O imperative mood corresponde, de modo bastante seme- lhante, ao modo imperativo do português, mas tem uma estrutura muito mais simples. Sua função também é seme- lhante: é uma estrutura usada para dar ordens, comandos ou realizar pedidos. FONTE: YOUTUBE Imperatives - How to give commands in English and more! F Y multimídia: vídeo 4.1. Imperative affirmative O afirmativo do modo imperativo é formado pela forma base do verbo, pura e simplesmente. Junto dela podem vir complementos, formando frases mais complexas. Do it! (Faça isso) Forget your dreams. (Esqueça seus sonhos) Drive for one mile and then turn right. (Dirija por uma milha e depois vire à direita) 4.2. Imperative negative Tal como na afirmativa, a estrutura negativa é muito sim- ples. Basta que se coloque o don't à frente da forma base. A estrutura sempre terá don't, pois o imperativo, tal qual no português, sempre é direcionado à segunda pessoa. Don’t buy it! (Não compre isso!) Never forget about your family. (Nunca esqueça de sua família.) Don’t eat more than 2 slices of pizza (Não coma mais de duas fatias de pizza). Existem poucas exceções às regras acima descritas: Don’t you dare to challenge me. (Não se atreva a me desafiar). (O pronome you tem nesse caso função enfática) Let’s (let us) start the game. (affirmative – Vamos começar o jogo) Let’s not start the game. (negative – Não vamos começar o jogo) Aplicando para aprender (A.P.A.) 1. Choose the alternative that best completes the sen- tence below. 110 People will complain about the costs of it as soon as the tournament _____________. a) will end b) would end c) end d) ended e) ends 2. Choose the alternative that best completes the sen- tence below. ______________ to mend something that is beyond mending. a) Don’t try b) Never don’t try c) Tried d) Will try e) Will you try 3. Choose the alternative that best completes the sen- tence below. The best way to have ________________ is to do it yourself. a) nothing did b) something c) something did d) something done e) everything 4. Choose the alternative that best completes the sen- tence below. If she ___________ you, she would certainly go for it. a) is b) was c) were d) will be e) could be 5. Escolha a alternativa gramaticalmente correta. a) The manager wants that you deliver the report as soon as possible. b) The manager wants you to deliver the report as soon as possible. c) The manager wanted that you delivered the report as soon as possible. d) The manager want you to deliver the report as soon as possible. e) The manager will want that you deliver the report as soon as possible. 6. Assinale a alternativa gramaticalmente correta. a) I went to the barber shop and I cut my hair for $30. b) The board said that they would like that I ran the whole company. c) Don’t to buy that overcoat! It is extremely expensive. d) They will call us by the time they will get home. e) I will take the appropriate measures when I am home. 7. Assinale a alternativa gramaticalmente in correta. a) The government will act when the right moment comes. b) I had my notebook repaired for $100. It was a bargain. c) The principal would like us to prepare the whole celebration. d) The company will expand their operations when they find the right partner. e) You fix the situation right now or consequences will be appalling. 8. Read the statements below. I. They would answer your requests if they could. II. The candidate was flown from Panama in a private jet. III. Sony pictures had thousands of secret files stolen by hackers. IV. I don’t want anybody else to touch you.” Choose the right alternative: a) All are correct. b) All are mistaken. c) Only I is correct. d) Only II and IV are correct. e) Only II and III are correct. 9. The sentence “Don’t anyone touch that innocent young boy again” expresses: a) a request. b) a warning. c) an apology. d) an advice. e) a compliment. 10. A partir do verso título da canção “Wake me up when september ends” da banda Green Day, é possível afirmar que: a) O eu-lírico já acordou de seu sono no último setembro. b) O eu-lírico acorda as pessoas todo mês de setembro. c) O eu-lírico quer ser acordado quando o mês de se- tembro chegar ao fim. d) O eu-lírico acordará sozinho no próximo mês de setembro. e) O eu-lírico quer ser acordado quando o mês de se- tembro chegar. A.P.A. Fixação TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 5 QUESTÕES A History of Pi The history of Pi, says the author, though a small part of the history of mathematics, is nevertheless a mirror of the history of man. Petr Beckmann holds up this mirror, giving the backgrou- nd of the times when Pi made progress — and also when it did not, because science was being stifled by militarism or religious 111 fanaticism. The mathematical level of this book is flexible, and there is plenty for readers of all ages and interests. About the author Petr Beckmann was born in Prague, Czechoslovakia, in 1924. Until 1963, he worked as a research scientist for the Czechoslovak Aca- demy of Sciences, when he was invited as a Visiting Professor to the University of Colorado, where he decided to stay permanently as professor of electrical engineering. Dr. Beckmann has authored 11 books and more than 50 scientific papers,mostly on probability theory and electromagnetic wave propagation. History is one of his side interests; another is linguistics (he is fluent in five languages and he has worked out a new generative grammar which enables a computer to construct trillions of grammatical sentences from a dictionary of less than 100 unprocessed words). He also publishes a monthly pro-science, pro-technology, pro- -free enterprise newsletter Access to Energy, in which he pro- motes the viewpoint that clean energy can be made plentiful, but that access to it is blocked by government interference and environmental paranoia. BECKMANN, PETR. A HISTORY OF PI. NEW YORK: BARNES & NOBLE BOOKS, 1983. 1. (ITA) O texto foi extraído de um(a): a) aba / orelha de livro. b) prefácio de livro. c) roteiro de leitura. d) resenha literária. e) ensaio literário. 2. (ITA) O livro A History of Pi: a) descreve grande parte da história da matemática e da humanidade. b) é direcionado apenas para iniciantes em matemática. c) conta a história de Petr Beckmann em tempos de repressão ao conhecimento. d) associa conceitos matemáticos a fatos da vida cotidiana. e) é acessível a um público diversificado. 3. (ITA) No contexto deste texto, o item lexical “stifled” (linha 7) pode ser traduzido por: a) sufocada. b) desmascarada. c) organizada. d) promulgada. e) institucionalizada. 4. (ITA) Dentre os interesses de Petr Beck mann, NÃO se encontra(m): a) a divulgação científica. b) a Geografia. c) a História. d) a pesquisa científica. e) as línguas estrangeiras. 5. (ITA) Indique o item lexical que pode substituir o sub- linhado no trecho “... mostly on probability theory and electromagnetic wave propagation.” (linhas 9 e 10), sem prejudicar o seu sentido. a) Absolutely b) Chiefly c) Inherently d) Randomly e) utterly TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 2 QUESTÕES Two in every three people on the planet– some 4 billion in total– are “excluded from the rule of law.” In many cases, this begins with the lack of official recognition of their birth: around 40% of the developing world’s five-year-old children are not registered as even existing. Later, people will find that the home they live in, the land they farm, or the business that they start, is not protected by legally enforceable property rights. Even in the rare cases when they can afford to go to court, the service is poor. India, for example, has only 11 judges for every 1million people. These alarming statistics are contained in a report from a com- mission on the legal empowerment of the poor, released on June 3rd at the United Nations. It argues that not only are such statistics evidence of grave injustice, they also reflect one of the main reasons why so much of humanity remains mired in poverty. Because they are outside the rule of law, the vast ma- jority of poor people are obliged to work (if they work at all) in the informal economy, which is less productive than the formal, legal part of the economy. THE ECONOMIST, JUNE 7TH 2008. 6. (Fuvest) De acordo com o texto, a) dois terços da população mundial vivem à mar- gem da lei. b) quarenta por cento dos recém-nascidos no mundo não são registrados. c) o comércio em países em desenvolvimento é rigid- amente regulado. d) casos de posse ilegal de terra são combatidos pe- los governos de países pobres. e) os cidadãos de países em desenvolvimento espe- ram muito tempo para obter documentos pessoais. 7. (Fuvest) O relatório citado no texto observa que: a) a ilegalidade é uma condição combatida em países subdesenvolvidos. b) os dados estatísticos sobre a pobreza no mundo são incompletos. c) o fortalecimento do poder legal dos pobres melho- raria sua condição econômica e social. d) a pobreza só poderia ser combatida com a inter- venção das Nações Unidas. e) a economia informal está em vias de ser abolida. TEXTO PARA AS PRÓXIMAS 3 QUESTÕES In 1993, the dawn of the Internet age, the liberating anonymity of the online world was captured in a well- known New Yorker 112 cartoon. One dog, sitting at a computer, tells another: “On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.” Fifteen years later, that anonymity is gone. Technology companies have long used “cookies,” little bits of tracking software slipped onto your computer, and other means, to record the Web sites you visit, the ads you click on, even the words you enter in search engines – information that some hold onto forever. They’re not telling you they’re doing it, and they’re not asking permission. Internet service providers (I.S.P.’s) are now getting into the act. Because they control your connection, they can keep track of everything you do online, and there have been reports that I.S.P.’s may have started to sell the information they collect. The driving force behind this prying is commerce. The big growth area in online advertising right now is “behavioral targeting.” Web sites can charge a premium if they are able to tell the maker of an expensive sports car that its ads will appear on Web pages clicked on by upper- income, middle-aged men. THE NEW YORK TIMES, APRIL 5TH 2008. 8. (Fuvest) As personagens dos quadrinhos, menciona- das no texto, se vangloriam de: a) sua alegria de viver. b) seu anonimato. c) sua capacidade de navegar na internet. d) seu mundo longe das telas. e) sua vida simples, como a de um cão. 9. (Fuvest) Segundo o texto, os provedores de internet: a) mantêm sigilo sobre os hábitos de navegação e comportamentos dos usuários. b) têm dificuldade de bloquear a invasão de pro- gramas espiões em nossos computadores. c) pedem autorização para indicar o endereço do usuário a terceiros, como sites de comércio eletrônico. d) obtêm dados a respeito de nossas ações na inter- net, havendo suspeita de que eles os vendem. e) cobram pela utilização de alguns sites de vendas, a eles conveniados. 10. (Fuvest) De acordo com o texto, a evolução da inter- net nos últimos quinze anos permite concluir que: a) o foco principal do comércio eletrônico são homens de meia idade. b) a liberdade de expressão é o bem mais cultuado no mundo digital. c) a supressão de “cookies” é um grande problema das empresas de tecnologia. d) as buscas dos usuários na internet são previsíveis. e) a vigilância a que somos submetidos é resultado de interesses comerciais. A.P.A. Complementar 1. (Unicamp) A tira tematiza a contribuição da ativi- dade humana para a deterioração do meio ambiente. Do diálogo apresentado, pode-se depreender que os ursos já sabiam (FONTE: HTTP://WWW.CAGLECARTOONS.COM/VIEWIMAGE. ASP?ID={15E52E8D-3CE2-4DF6-B331-D109F2DD2BBC}.) a) do aumento do pH dos mares e acabam de consta- tar o abaixamento do nível dos mares. b) da diminuição do pH dos mares e acabam de cons- tatar o aumento do nível dos mares. c) do aumento do nível dos mares e acabam de cons- tatar o abaixamento do pH dos mares. d) da diminuição do nível dos mares e acabam de constatar o aumento do pH dos mares. 2. (Unicamp) “If you believe in freedom of speech, you believe in freedom of speech for views you don’t like. Goebbels was in favor of freedom of speech for views he liked. So was Stalin. If you’re in favor of freedom of speech, that means you’re in favor of freedom of speech precisely for views you despise.” (NOAM CHOMSKY) (FONTE: HTTP://NOAM-CHOMSKY.TUMBLR.COM/POST/7223808896/ IF-YOUBELIEVE-IN-FREEDOM-OF-SPEECH-YOU-BELIEVE.) O autor do texto a) despreza os que restringem a liberdade de expressão. b) critica os excessos da liberdade de expressão. c) critica a falta de liberdade de expressão. d) defende a liberdade de expressão sem restrições. 3. (Unicamp) (FONTE: HTTP://WWW.GOCOMICS.COM/CALVINANDHOBBES/2015/08/08.) 113 Na tirinha, Calvin dá dicas sobre como a) derrotar o adversário em um jogo de futebol. b) vencer o interlocutor em uma discussão. c) derrotar o adversário na olimpíada de inglês. d) ser um bom comunicador. 4. The Future of Food SCENARIO PLANNING TRAININGIn 2030... What will we eat? Where will our food come from? Will we all have enough? Using the global system as a backdrop, expert scenario practitioners will help you apply the methodology that systematically imagines multiple futures and their risks and opportunities START ONLINE, THEN COME TO STANFORD UNIVERSITY Application deadline AUGUST 3, 2015 Online content opens August 10, 2015 Onsite Immersion at Stanford Sept.28-Oct.1, 2015 Apply now at WORLDVIEW.STANFORD.EDU SPACE LIMITED TO 32 PARTICIPANTS (ADAPTADO DE STANFORD MAGAZINE, JULY/AUGUST 2015, P.3.) O texto anuncia um a) curso on-line e presencial que oferece uma metod- ologia para ajudar a definir quais alimentos deverão ser consumidos no futuro. b) curso on-line que oferece uma metodologia para minimizar riscos no consumo de alimentos no futuro. c) curso on-line e presencial que oferece uma met- odologia para construção de cenários futuros sobre consumo de alimentos. d) curso presencial que oferece uma metodologia para ajudar as pessoas a comerem melhor no futuro. Para as questões 5 e 6, leia o texto a seguir. Advice for new students from those who know (old students) The first day of college I was a ball of nerves. I remember walking into my first class and running to the first seat I found, thinking everyone would be staring at me. But nobody seemed to notice and then it hit me: The fact that nobody knew me meant nobody would judge, which, upon reflection, was what I was scared of the most. I told myself to let go. All along the year, I forced myself into situations that were uncomfortable for me – for example, auditioning for a dance piece. Believe it or not, that performance was a highlight of my freshman year. My advice: challenge yourself to try some- thing new, something you couldn’t have done in high school. – Ria Jagasia, Vanderbilt University, ’18. (ADAPTADO DE HTTP://WWW.NYTIMES.COM/2015/08/02/ EDUCATION/EDLIFE/ADVICE-FOR-NEW-STUDENTS-FROM-THOSE- WHO-KNOW-OLD-STUDENTS.HTML?REF=EDLIFE.) 5. No primeiro dia de faculdade, Ria ficou muito nervosa a) por não conhecer ninguém. b) por achar que seria julgada pelos colegas. c) porque ninguém olhou para ela. d) porque não sabia dançar. 6. Para lidar com a situação, a estratégia adotada foi deixar de se preocupar e a) fazer coisas que nunca fez antes. b) fazer novos amigos. c) fazer um curso de dança como ouvinte. d) abandonar o curso. 7. IF APES GO EXTINCT, SO COULD ENTIRE FORESTS Bonobos eat a lot of fruit, and fruit contains seeds. Those seeds travel through a bonobo’s digestive system while bonobo itself travels around the forest. A few hours later, the seeds end up being deposited far from where the fruits were plucked. And that is where the new trees come from. According to a paper recently published, if the bonobos disa- ppeared, the plants would also likely go extinct, for many trees and plants species in Congo rely almost exclusively on bonobos for seed dispersal. The bonobo has two major functions here. First of all, many seeds will not germinate well unless they have been “handled” by ano- ther species. Stomach acids and intestinal processes make the seed more able to absorb water and later sprout. Secondly, many seeds will not succeed if they remain too close to their parental trees. The seeds that fell to the ground near their parents did not survive because they were choked off by the nearby plants. The bonobos eat about 3,5 hours every day and travel a mean of 1.2 kilometers from meal sites before defecating. (ADAPTADO DE HTTP://BLOGS.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM/EXTINCTION- COUNTDOWN/IF-APES-GO-EXTINCT-SO-COULD-ENTIRE-FORESTS/.) Qual é a explicação para o título? a) Os bonobos se alimentam de plantas e suas fezes aju- dam a adubar florestas. Como andam grandes distân- cias, espalham esse adubo pela floresta. b) Os bonobos vivem em árvores e suas fezes, que con- têm fungicidas naturais, protegem as árvores dos fun- gos. Como andam grandes distâncias, podem proteger florestas inteiras. c) Os bonobos se alimentam de frutas com sementes. Seu sistema digestivo prepara as sementes para a germinação. Como andam grandes distâncias, suas fezes ajudam a espalhar as sementes pela floresta. d) Os bonobos vivem em árvores e se alimentam de folhas, que se transformam em fungicidas naturais aos serem digeridas. Quando liberados pelas fezes, esses fungicidas protegem as florestas. 114 Para as questões 8 e 9, leia o texto abaixo. We’ve modified our behavior so we can text and walk Texting – or checking social media or reading/responding to mail or reading the news or checking the weather or watching a video – while walking is a pretty common phenomenon. It’s so common that most people who own a mobile device have become texting walkers. Research suggests that these texters adopt protective measures to minimize the risk of accidents when walking. They’re less likely to trip because they shorten their step length, reduce step fre- quency, lengthen the time during which both feet are in contact with the ground, and increase obstacle clearance height. Taken together this creates an exaggerated image of walking, but it apparently slows the walker enough so that he registers some of what is happening around him and can compensate for it. (ADAPTADO DE HTTP://BLOGS.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COM/ANTHROPOLOGY- INPRACTICE/ WE-VE-MODIFIED-OUR-BEHAVIOR-SO-WE-CAN-TEXT-AND-WALK/.) 8. Segundo o texto, “Texting walkers” são pessoas que: a) caminham longas distâncias e usam o celular para registrar essas distâncias. b) escrevem ou leem mensagens, ou veem vídeos no celular enquanto caminham. c) testam o celular como dispositivo para caminha- das longas. d) tropeçam e caem quando usam o celular enquanto caminham. 9. Que mudanças no comportamento dessas pessoas são decorrentes da adaptação à tecnologia apresenta- da no texto? a) Elas diminuem a extensão e a frequência dos pas- sos, aumentando o tempo em que os dois pés ficam em contato com o chão; calculam melhor a altura dos obstáculos no percurso. b) Elas aumentam a extensão dos passos e diminuem sua frequência, para que os dois pés fiquem mais tempo em contato com o chão. c) Antes de iniciar a caminhada, elas registram, no celu- lar, a extensão do trajeto, a frequência dos passos e o tempo em que os dois pés ficam em contato com o chão. d) Antes de iniciar a caminhada, elas registram, no celular, a extensão e a altura dos obstáculos do per- curso, a frequência dos passos e o tempo em que os dois pés ficam em contato com o chão. 10. (Unicamp) Touching thermal-paper receipts could ex- tend BPA retention in the body When people handle receipts printed on thermal paper contai- ning the endocrine disruptor bisphenol A (BPA), the toxic che- mical could linger in the body for a week or more. Jonathan W. Martin of Stockholm University and Jiaying Liu of the University of Alberta asked six male volunteers to handle paper containing isotopically labeled BPA for five minutes. The volunteers then put on nitrile gloves, wore them for two hours, removed them, and washed their hands with soap. Afterward, the researchers measured the labeled BPA and its metabolites in the volunte- ers’ urine regularly for two days and then once again a week later. The study only traced the isotopically labeled (deuterated) BPA and its metabolites, so any additional BPA exposure from other sources was not monitored. (DEIRDRE LOCKWOOD, TOUCHING THERMAL-PAPER RECEIPTS COULD EXTEND BPA RETENTION IN THE BODY. CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS, 04/09/2017.) O texto discorre sobre uma pesquisa cujo objetivo foi a) determinar como o manuseio de papel térmico pode contaminar uma pessoa com bisfenol A, consid- erando que a concentração foi monitorada utilizan- do-se um BPA em que átomos de 1H foram substi- tuídos por 2H. b) analisar de que forma o uso de luvas nitrílicas la- vadas com sabão e contendo BPA deuterado pode contaminar receitas impressas em papel térmico que contém um disruptor