Questões de Inglês para Vestibular

cód. #2694

COPESE - UFT - Inglês - 2019 - Vestibular - Primeiro Semestre - Língua Portuguesa, Inglês e Matemática

Missing Dentures Found Stuck in Man's Throat 8 Days
After Surgery

       Here’s why it’s best to remove false teeth before surgery: You just might swallow them.
    A medical journal is reporting the case of a 72- year-old British man whose partial dentures apparently got stuck in his throat during surgery and weren’t discovered for eight days.
    The man went to the emergency room because he was having a hard time swallowing and was coughing up blood. Doctors ordered a chest X-ray, diagnosed him with what they wrongly thought was pneumonia and sent him home with antibiotics and steroids. It took another hospital visit before another X-ray revealed the problem: His dentures — a metal roof plate and three false teeth — lodged at the top of his throat.
    The man thought his dentures were lost while he was in the hospital for minor surgery. How it happened isn’t exactly clear, but a halfdozen previous cases have been documented of dentures going astray as surgical patients were put to sleep.
     Placing a tube in a patient’s airway can push things where they don’t belong, said Dr. Mary Dale Peterson, an anesthesiologist at Driscoll Children’s Hospital in Corpus Christi, Texas.
     Besides dentures, retainers, loose teeth and tongue piercings can cause problems, said Peterson, who is president-elect of the American Society of Anesthesiologists. Before a child’s surgery, she’ll pull a very loose tooth and tell the patient to expect a visit from the tooth fairy. "We can make a nice game of it."
     In the British case, after the dentures were removed, the man had several bouts of bleeding that required more surgery before he recovered. The journal article didn’t identify the man or the hospital involved. […]

Available at: https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/man-s-missingdentures-were-found-stuck-his-throat-8-n1041641 (edited).
According to the text, it is CORRECT to affirm:

A) doctors missed their false teeth after surgery.

B) the patient’s implants were removed before surgery.

C) surgical patients have never lost dental plates in surgery.

D) an elderly man has ingested his dentures during surgery.

A B C D E

cód. #3974

INEP - Inglês - 2019 - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre

Big education publisher to end printed textbooks  


The world's largest education publisher, Pearson, has said it will gradually phase out printed textbooks. It has taken a decision to make all of its learning resources "digital first". Pearson said the future of the industry is in e-books and digital services. Pearson CEO John Fallon explained more about the company's future direction. He told the BBC: "We are now over the digital tipping point. Over half our annual revenues come from digital sales, so we've decided, a little bit like in other industries like newspapers or music or in broadcast, that it is time to flick the switch in how we primarily make and create our products." He added: "I am increasingly confident and excited about this." Pearson said a huge advantage of digital books is that they can be continually updated, _________3 means teachers will always have access to the latest versions of textbooks. Mr. Fallon said Pearson would stop its current business model of revising printed course books every three years. He said this model has dominated the industry for over four decades and is now past its use-by date. Fallon said: "We learn by engaging and sharing with others, and a digital environment enables you to do that in a much more effective way." He added the digital books will appeal to the "Netflix and Spotify generation". Textbook writers are worried they will earn less from their books as digital products are sold on a subscription basis.


Source: https://breakingnewsenglish.com/1907/190718- textbooks.html Captured on: 26/07/19

The best pronoun to fill in the gap in the text is:

A) that

B) who

C) where

D) which

E) whose

A B C D E

cód. #4742

VUNESP - Inglês - 2019 - Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais

Wood wide web: trees’ social networks are mapped 


    Research has shown that beneath every forest and wood there is a complex underground web of roots, fungi and bacteria helping to connect trees and plants to one another. This subterranean social network, nearly 500 million years old, has become known as the “wood wide web”. Now, an international study has produced the first global map of the “mycorrhizal fungi networks” dominating this secretive world.

    Using machine-learning, researchers from the Crowther Lab at ETH Zurich, Switzerland, and Stanford University in the US used the database of the Global Forest Initiative, which covers 1.2 million forest tree plots with 28,000 species, from more than 70 countries. Using millions of direct observations of trees and their symbiotic associations on the ground, the researchers could build models from the bottom up to visualise these fungal networks for the first time. Prof Thomas Crowther, one of the authors of the report, told the BBC, “It’s the first time that we’ve been able to understand the world beneath our feet, but at a global scale.”

    The research reveals how important mycorrhizal networks are to limiting climate change — and how vulnerable they are to the effects of it. “Just like an Magnetic Resonance Imaging scan of the brain helps us to understand how the brain works, this global map of the fungi beneath the soil helps us to understand how global ecosystems work,” said Prof Crowther. “What we find is that certain types of microorganisms live in certain parts of the world, and by understanding that we can figure out how to restore different types of ecosystems and also how the climate is changing.” Losing chunks of the wood wide web could well increase “the feedback loop of warming temperatures and carbon emissions.”

    Mycorrhizal fungi are those that form a symbiotic relationship with plants. There are two main groups of mycorrhizal fungi: arbuscular fungi (AM) that penetrate the host’s roots, and ectomycorrhizal fungi (EM) which surround the tree’s roots without penetrating them.

                                                (Claire Marshall. www.bbc.com, 15.05.2019. Adaptado.)

De acordo com o segundo e o terceiro parágrafos, os pesquisadores

A) perceberam que as espécies de animais e vegetais formam um todo simbiótico.

B) identificaram 28 mil espécies de fungos e bactérias nas florestas estudadas.

C) utilizaram informações da Global Forest Initiative, que abrange florestas de mais de 70 países.

D) relataram que o mundo subterrâneo de microrganismos e raízes cria grupos de árvores do mesmo tipo.

E) criaram um mapa das florestas, identificando as espécies de árvores e animais que se comunicam.

A B C D E

cód. #2183

UNICENTRO - Inglês - 2019 - Vestibular - PAC - 3ª Etapa


Considering language usage in the text, it’s correct to say:

A) The word “lives” (l. 2) is the Simple Present form of the verb.

B) The phrase “as complex as” (l. 3) expresses inequality.

C) The modal “can” (l. 5) expresses certainty.

D) The expression “such as” (l. 7) introduces an exemplification.

A B C D E

cód. #3975

INEP - Inglês - 2019 - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre

Big education publisher to end printed textbooks  


The world's largest education publisher, Pearson, has said it will gradually phase out printed textbooks. It has taken a decision to make all of its learning resources "digital first". Pearson said the future of the industry is in e-books and digital services. Pearson CEO John Fallon explained more about the company's future direction. He told the BBC: "We are now over the digital tipping point. Over half our annual revenues come from digital sales, so we've decided, a little bit like in other industries like newspapers or music or in broadcast, that it is time to flick the switch in how we primarily make and create our products." He added: "I am increasingly confident and excited about this." Pearson said a huge advantage of digital books is that they can be continually updated, _________3 means teachers will always have access to the latest versions of textbooks. Mr. Fallon said Pearson would stop its current business model of revising printed course books every three years. He said this model has dominated the industry for over four decades and is now past its use-by date. Fallon said: "We learn by engaging and sharing with others, and a digital environment enables you to do that in a much more effective way." He added the digital books will appeal to the "Netflix and Spotify generation". Textbook writers are worried they will earn less from their books as digital products are sold on a subscription basis.


Source: https://breakingnewsenglish.com/1907/190718- textbooks.html Captured on: 26/07/19

According to the text, it is wrong to affirm that:

A) Digital books appeal to the generation that is used to computers.

B) The model of revising printed books has occurred for about 30 years.

C) Stopping printing textbooks may be harmful to writers.

D) All Pearson’s learning resources will soon be “digital first”.

E) Digital books can be updated more easily than the printed ones.

A B C D E

cód. #4743

VUNESP - Inglês - 2019 - Prova de Conhecimentos Gerais

Wood wide web: trees’ social networks are mapped 


    Research has shown that beneath every forest and wood there is a complex underground web of roots, fungi and bacteria helping to connect trees and plants to one another. This subterranean social network, nearly 500 million years old, has become known as the “wood wide web”. Now, an international study has produced the first global map of the “mycorrhizal fungi networks” dominating this secretive world.

    Using machine-learning, researchers from the Crowther Lab at ETH Zurich, Switzerland, and Stanford University in the US used the database of the Global Forest Initiative, which covers 1.2 million forest tree plots with 28,000 species, from more than 70 countries. Using millions of direct observations of trees and their symbiotic associations on the ground, the researchers could build models from the bottom up to visualise these fungal networks for the first time. Prof Thomas Crowther, one of the authors of the report, told the BBC, “It’s the first time that we’ve been able to understand the world beneath our feet, but at a global scale.”

    The research reveals how important mycorrhizal networks are to limiting climate change — and how vulnerable they are to the effects of it. “Just like an Magnetic Resonance Imaging scan of the brain helps us to understand how the brain works, this global map of the fungi beneath the soil helps us to understand how global ecosystems work,” said Prof Crowther. “What we find is that certain types of microorganisms live in certain parts of the world, and by understanding that we can figure out how to restore different types of ecosystems and also how the climate is changing.” Losing chunks of the wood wide web could well increase “the feedback loop of warming temperatures and carbon emissions.”

    Mycorrhizal fungi are those that form a symbiotic relationship with plants. There are two main groups of mycorrhizal fungi: arbuscular fungi (AM) that penetrate the host’s roots, and ectomycorrhizal fungi (EM) which surround the tree’s roots without penetrating them.

                                                (Claire Marshall. www.bbc.com, 15.05.2019. Adaptado.)

De acordo com o texto, a “wood wide web”, conhecida como a “internet das florestas”, corresponde

A) ao sistema de nutrição das árvores por meio da decomposição de matéria orgânica por fungos e bactérias.

B) ao conjunto de fungos e bactérias que se desenvolvem como parasitas das árvores.

C) à rede de microrganismos nocivos que pode acelerar a devastação das florestas.

D) à maneira secreta de sobrevivência encontrada pelos fungos e bactérias em um ambiente florestal hostil.

E) a uma trama entre raízes, fungos e bactérias que promove conexões entre os vegetais da floresta.

A B C D E

cód. #2184

UNICENTRO - Inglês - 2019 - Vestibular - PAC - 3ª Etapa


Fill in the parentheses with T (True) or F (False). As far as emotions are considered, animals can feel


( ) happy.

( ) angry.


( ) scared.

( ) guilty.


( ) sympatheti


The correct sequence, from top to bottom, is

A) T T T F T

B) T F F T T

C) F T F T F

D) F F T T F

A B C D E

cód. #3976

INEP - Inglês - 2019 - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre

Big education publisher to end printed textbooks  


The world's largest education publisher, Pearson, has said it will gradually phase out printed textbooks. It has taken a decision to make all of its learning resources "digital first". Pearson said the future of the industry is in e-books and digital services. Pearson CEO John Fallon explained more about the company's future direction. He told the BBC: "We are now over the digital tipping point. Over half our annual revenues come from digital sales, so we've decided, a little bit like in other industries like newspapers or music or in broadcast, that it is time to flick the switch in how we primarily make and create our products." He added: "I am increasingly confident and excited about this." Pearson said a huge advantage of digital books is that they can be continually updated, _________3 means teachers will always have access to the latest versions of textbooks. Mr. Fallon said Pearson would stop its current business model of revising printed course books every three years. He said this model has dominated the industry for over four decades and is now past its use-by date. Fallon said: "We learn by engaging and sharing with others, and a digital environment enables you to do that in a much more effective way." He added the digital books will appeal to the "Netflix and Spotify generation". Textbook writers are worried they will earn less from their books as digital products are sold on a subscription basis.


Source: https://breakingnewsenglish.com/1907/190718- textbooks.html Captured on: 26/07/19

Read the statements below:


I. Pearson has stopped printing textbooks.
II. The publisher has profits of over 50% from digital sales.
III. Printed course books are revised by Pearson every three years.


According to the text, choose the only correct alternative:

A) Only I is true.

B) Only II is true.

C) I and II are true.

D) I and III are true.

E) II and III are true.

A B C D E

cód. #5000

Instituto Consulplan - Inglês - 2019 - Vestibular - Medicina

The Five Ways to Wellbeing are a wellbeing equivalent of ‘five fruit and vegetables a day’.



(Available: http://www.wales.nhs.)
The sentence “Look out, as well as in” (5th box) advices readers to

A) go for the mean things near them.

B) be aware of the hazards of society.

C) assemble outer and inner features.

D) postpone gratifying all the people.

A B C D E

cód. #2185

UNICENTRO - Inglês - 2019 - Vestibular - PAC - 3ª Etapa


According to recent studies, the brains of primates and humans are

A) not very complex.

B) significantly different.

C) alike in some ways.

D) difficult to be analyzed.

A B C D E

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