: Lee el siguiente poema del poeta español Rafael Alberti y resuelve la cuestión. Si yo nací campesino...
Rafael Alberti
Si yo nací campesino,
si yo nací marinero,
¿por qué me tenéis aquí,
si este aquí yo no lo quiero?
El mejor día, ciudad
a quien jamás he querido,
el mejor día —¡silencio!—
habré desaparecido.
Disponible en: http://www.palabravirtual.com/index.php?ir=ver_voz1.php&wid=1708&p=Rafael%20Alberti&t=Si%20yo%20nac%ED%20campesino…&o=Nuria%20Espert. Acceso el: 12 nov. 2013.
Enunciado:
En el fragmento “a la que jamás he querido”, el término que determina que el verbo sea conjugado en Pretérito Perfecto es e
Questões relacionadas
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(UECE) Na atualidade, os suplementos vitamínicos fazem, cada vez mais, parte da rotina de pessoas em todo o mundo, pois possuem a função de suprir a deficiência de nutrientes necessários para o bom funcionamento do corpo, quando não há tempo suficiente para dedicação a uma alimentação equilibrada. Sobre as vitaminas, é correto afirmar-se que:
- Língua Portuguesa - Fundamental | 8.8 Adjunto Adnominal
Texto base: 3934707
Leia os textos I e II para responder à questão. Texto I Art. 5º – Nenhuma criança ou adolescente será objeto de qualquer forma de negligência, discriminação, exploração, violência, crueldade e opressão, punido na forma da lei qualquer atentado, por ação ou omissão, aos seus direitos fundamentais. Estatuto da Criança e do Adolescente: LEI Nº 8.069, 13 de julho,1990.
Disponível em: http://www.planalto.gov.br/ccivil_03/LEIS/L8069.htm. Acesso em: 10 abr. 2019. Texto II Criança de 3 anos foge de creche e é encontrada na rua em Piracicaba Uma criança de apenas três anos de idade saiu sem ser vista de uma escola municipal [...] em Piracicaba. O garoto passou pelo portão, andou pela calçada e atravessou uma rua sem que ninguém na unidade sentisse sua falta. Ele foi encontrado por uma mulher, cem metros distantes da creche. Depois de perguntar aos vizinhos sobre a família da criança, ela e outros moradores bateram à porta da creche, onde a diretora reconheceu o aluno. [...] Disponível em: www.jornaldepiracicaba.com.br/crianca-de-3-anos-foge-de-creche-e-e-encontrada-na-rua-em-piracicaba/.
Acesso em: 10 abr. 2019.
Enunciado:
O adjunto adverbial “apenas”, destacado no Texto II,
- Biologia | 11.9 Sistema Reprodutor
Um problema que tem aumentado consideravelmente, nos últimos anos, é a gravidez na adolescência. O uso e o conhecimento adequado de métodos contraceptivos pelos jovens podem reverter este quadro. Sobre os métodos contraceptivos, é incorreto afirmar-se que:
- Língua Inglesa | 2.01 Pronomes
(PUC-RIO) India’s Leading Export: CEOs
2What on earth did the Banga brothers’ mother feed them for breakfast? 3Whatever it was, it worked: Vindi Banga grew up to become a top executive at the food and personal-care giant Unilever, then a partner at the private-equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice. His younger brother Ajay, 4after heading Citigroup’s Asian operations, was last year named CEO of MasterCard – all without a degree from a Western business school and without abandoning his Sikh turban. When Ajay took over at the credit-card company’s suburban – New York City headquarters, the Times of India crowed that he was the first “entirely India-minted executive” at a multinational’s helm.
The brothers laugh when asked for their mother’s breakfast menu, deflecting suggestions that they were raised by a Bengal-tiger mom. Instead, they cite an itinerant childhood as a key ingredient in their success. The sons of a lieutenant general in the Indian army, they moved to a new posting every couple of years – 5perfect training, it turns out, for global executives facing new markets and uncertain conditions. “You had to adapt to new friends, new places,” recalls Vindi. 1“You had to create your ecosystem wherever you went.”
What factors account for the rise and rise of India-trained business minds? “Our colleagues in our Asian offices are asking the same question,” laughs Jill Ader, head of CEO succession at the executivesearch firm Egon Zehnder International. 7“Their clients in China and Southeast Asia are saying, ‘How come it’s the Indians getting all the top jobs?’” It could be because today’s generation of Indian managers grew up in a country that provided them with the experience so critical for today’s global boss. 6Multiculturalism? Check. Complex competitive environment? Check. Resource-constrained developing economy? You got that right. 8And they grew up speaking English, the global business language.
For multinationals, it makes good sense to have leaders experienced in working with expanding Asian markets. 9And India is already the location of many of their operations. “India and China are also the countries of future profits for the multinationals, so they may want their global leaders to come out of them”, says Anshuman Das, a co-founder of CareerNet, a Bangalore executive-search company.
Competitive and complex, India has evolved from a poorly run, centrally controlled economy into the perfect petri dish in which to grow a 21st century CEO. “The Indians are the friendly and familiar faces of Asia,” says Ader. “They think in English, they’re used to multinationals in their country, they’re very adaptive, and they’re supremely confident.” The subcontinent has been global for centuries, having endured, and absorbed, waves of foreign colonizers, from the Mughals to the British. Practiced traders and migrants, Indians have impressive transnational networks. “The earth is full of Indians,” wrote Salman Rushdie. “We get everywhere.” Unlike, say, a Swede or a German, an Indian executive is raised in a multiethnic, multifaith, multilingual society, one nearly as diverse as the modern global marketplace.
10Unlike Americans, they’re well versed in negotiating India’s byzantine bureaucracy, a key skill to have in emerging markets. And unlike the Chinese, they can handle the messiness of a litigious democracy. “In China, you want something done, you talk to a bureaucrat and a politician – it gets done,” observes Ajay. “In India, if you talk to a bureaucrat or a politician, there are going to be 600 other people with their own points of view.” There’s an old saw about Asian business cultures: “The Chinese roll out the red carpet; Indians roll out the red tape.”
Maybe that’s why Indian managers are good at managing it. 12They have cut their teeth in a country ranked 134th by the World Bank for ease of doing business. To be fair, it’s also the reason some of them left home.
India’s economic liberalization, which began in 1991, was another blessing for this generation of executives. 11It gave them exposure to a young and fast-growing consumer market. “Liberalization unleashed a level of competition that makes you stand on your toes,” recalls Vindi. “We had to learn to compete with international players but also with very good, extremely fast local ones.” In 1987, the company’s leading detergent, Surf, faced off against Nirma, a locally produced brand. “It didn’t cost 5% less, or 10% less,” says Vindi, shaking his head. “It cost a third of our product. We had to make a product that was better, for the same price.” Within 12 months, they had.
By Carla Power
Adapted from Time Magazine – August 01, 2011. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2084441,00.html. Retrieved on August 5, 2011.
Check the CORRECT statement concerning reference
- História - Fundamental | 03. Reformas Religiosas
Leia o texto a seguir, parte do discurso do Papa Urbano II, no século XII.
Um lugar a ser conquistado e mantido apenas pela fé. Pois chamamos por suas espadas! Lutem contra a amaldiçoada raça que avilta a terra sagrada, Jerusalém, fértil acima de todas outras.
Disponível em: < http://linux.alfamaweb.com.br/sgw/downloads/142_082706_CRUZADAS.pdf>. Acesso em: 3 dez. 2012.
A afirmativa que apresenta a explicação para a frase é: