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Acesse GrátisQuestões de Inglês - Reading/Writing
Questão 2 6012712
UNICAMP 1° Fase 2022Em artigo publicado em 14 de junho de 2020, o jornal The Straits Times, de Singapura, apresentou os resultados de uma pesquisa sobre a percepção dos respondentes a respeito das profissões mais essenciais durante a pandemia. A imagem a seguir revela algumas estatísticas obtidas com base nessas respostas.
Em um post em sua rede social, o comediante Rishi Budhrani comentou esses resultados:
Pode-se dizer que Budhrani
Questão 14 4442831
UNICAMP 2° Dia 2021Os tweets abaixo remetem ao contexto do trabalho domiciliar durante o período de isolamento social.
A resposta de Andrea ao tweet de Julieanne
Questão 65 8485929
UNICAMP 1° Fase 2023Os textos A e B são postagens no perfil do The New York Times na rede social Instagram.
Texto A
Texto B
Qual a relação que se estabelece entre os textos A e B?
Questão 29 182978
UDESC Manhã 2018/1TEXT 1
Answer the questions below according to Text 1.
This message is showing that something is going on. Mark the correct alternative which explains that.
Questão 36 210741
UNICAMP 2018Should Twitter entertain millions with public arguments?
Comedian Janey Godley's tweets of a couple's train-bound row raise questions of how to protect our privacy in public places.
If the troubles of the two travellers had made it on to a newspaper first rather than a comedian's Twitter feed, would we be so relaxed about loss of privacy? I think perhaps not.
Social media has done so much for freedom of expression, it would be cruel if it actually leads to less social freedom for fear of having our every misstep, angry word or misbehaviour broadcast there for all to see.
(Adaptado de David Banks, Should Twitter entertain millions with public rows? The Guardian, 13/07/2012. Disponível em https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/jul/13/twittermillions- public-rows. Acessado em 10/07/2017.)
No artigo de opinião acima, o autor
Questão 77 250966
UNITINS 2016Read the following text to answer question
Dishonesty Only Provides Short-Term Benefits
Dan Ariely
Dan Ariely is the James B. Duke professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University and the coproducer of "Dishonesty: The Truth About Lies." He is on Twitter.
Updated September 29, 2015, 3:22 AM
Is honesty for suckers? If by “suckers” you mean people who care about others and the social good, then yes, it is. If by “suckers” you mean people who care about the long-term aspects of their business (see the drop in stock price of Volkswagen) then yes, it is. And if by “suckers” you mean people who care about the meaning of their brand (I own a Volkswagen Golf and I don’t think I will ever be able to look at it again in the same way) than yes again. Any business with long-terms plans needs a culture of honesty to deter cheating and help maintain the pool of social trust. The bottom line is that dishonesty can be a good strategy for someone who is trying to maximize short-term profits. So, if you plan to stay around just for a short while, maybe it can be a profitable approach. But, if you have any long-terms plans it is important for your business to create a culture of honesty that will help the employees overcome short-term incentives for dishonesty and keep them in line with the long-term best interest of the company and society.
company and society.
And there is one more thing to consider, which is that when an individual or a company acts dishonestly, they
pollute the trust pool -- they erode the social trust we have in one another -- and we are all worse for it. This is why
we are, and need to be, outraged with Volkswagen, and why their act is not just about their cars – it is a betrayal of
the social trust, and the trust fallout I suspect will have an impact on all German manufacturers and all car makers.
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Topics: Culture, corruption, morality
Source: <www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2015/09/29/is-honesty-for-suckers/dishonesty-only-provides-shortterm- benefits> (Adapted)
According to the informations in the second paragraph, dishonesty: