Kuadro - O MELHOR CURSO PRÉ-VESTIBULAR
Kuadro - O MELHOR CURSO PRÉ-VESTIBULAR
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Questões de Inglês - UNIMONTES 2019 | Gabarito e resoluções

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Questão
2019Inglês

(UNIMONTES - 2019) Jessica Nabongo completes quest to become first black woman to visit every country Lilit Marcus, CNN Updated 9th October 2019. (CNN) - Some people set records by jumping the highest or running the fastest. But for Jessica Nabongo, a UN employee turned travel blogger, its by becoming the first black woman to visit every country on Earth. She set out to visit all 193 countries in the world in 2016, and on October 6 arrived the last on her list, Seychelles,[5] according to a post on her Instagram page. She also clocked up a couple of what the UN calls non-observer status territories, taking her total to 195. Welcome to the Seychelles!! Country 195 of 195! So much to say but for now I will just say thank you to this entire community for all of your support. This was our journey and thanks to all of you who came along for the ride!!, she wrote. [10] Born in Detroit to Ugandan parents and holding two passports, Nabongos epic odyssey hasnt just been about getting her name in a record book. Shes hoping to pave the way for women and people of color to do the same. Although she felt like shed achieved the American dream by landing a six-figure job at a pharmaceutical company after college and buying her own place in the Motor City, the work didnt satisfy her. [15] Often, as the only person of color in a crowd, she stood out whether she wanted to or not. Nabongo also has dark skin and shaves her head. To date, there are about 150 known people who have been to every country, the majority of whom are white men traveling on European passports - the ones who have the option to blend in in more places. As of April 2018, there were 193 recognized countries in the United Nations, plus two with non-observer status. [20] Nabongo visited them all. Her passports have stamps from places as far-flung as Nigeria, Cuba, Turkey and Laos. Disponvel em: https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/jessica-nabongo-every-country/index.html. Acesso em: 9 out. 2019. Adaptado. *os nmeros entre colchetes correspondem aos nmeros das linhas do texto original. A formaCORRETAde linguagem indireta da sentena [...] I will just say thank you to this entire community for all of your support. (linhas 7-8) corresponde a:

Questão
2019Inglês

(UNIMONTES - 2019) INSTRUO: Leia o texto que segue para responder questo proposta. THE STORY OF ELLIS ISLAND Mass migrations have marked the history of the human race ever since people began to dream of a better life Migration is in the news these days, as Donald Trump tries to set up new physical and administrative barriers against people wanting to enter the USA mostly from Central America, Asia and Africa. But a century ago, the USA welcomed immigrants, most of them people from Europe who were migrating in mass, looking for a better life in the USA. Ellis Island, the small island in New York Harbor was, for millions of would-be immigrants, their first experience [5] of the promised land. The year is 1906, the date November 16th. Franz and Ulrike Schumacher and their three children have just disembarked from the Hamburg-Amerika line steamship that has carriedthemacross the stormy North Atlantic Ocean from Germany. Like the thousands of other people milling around them, they are totally bewildered, caught up in a mixture of [10] hope and apprehension, as they crowd into a vast waiting room. The room sounds like the Tower of Babel, for few of those in it speak a word of English. They speak German, Polish, Dutch, Hungarian, or Russian maybe, yet they have come, seeking a new life in a new world; and now they are on American soil for the first time. This is America! America! Or at least it is Ellis Island. After interminable hours of waiting, the Schumacher family are finally called to a desk; immigration officials [15] study their papers, and ask them where they intend to go. They dont ask how long theyre planning to stay, however, since they know the answer already. All those who pass through Ellis Island and that could mean over 11,000 people per day are would-be immigrants. They are looking to start a new life in a new world. For many, passing through Ellis Island was not so much a matter of stepping into a new world, it was stepping into a new life, a new character. And so it was that the man who finally led his family through the door and onto the [20] ferry packed with a jostling crowd of new Americans was not Franz Schumacher any more, but Frank Shoemaker, even if he still didnt understand more than a couple of words of English. Disponvel em: https://linguapress.com/advanced/ellis-island.htm. Acesso em: 7 out. 2019. Adaptado. *os nmeros entre colchetes indicam o nmero das linhas do texto original. A nica alternativa cuja forma verbalNOexpressa um fato ocorrido no passado :

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