Questões de concursos sobre "Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension" | Inglês - página 228
Confira abaixo as principais questões de concursos sobre Interpretação de texto | Reading comprehension que cairam em provas de concursos públicos anteriores:
Your answers to questions 23 to 27 must be based on the review below, which is entitled "Illusions of Empire: Defining the New American Order".
Illusions of Empire: Defining the New American Order Source: www.foreignaffairs.org March/April 2004 (Adapted)
In his book The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic, Chalmers Johnson advances the disturbing claim that the United States' Cold War-era military power and far-flung base system have, in the last decade, been consolidated in a new form of global imperial rule. The United States, according to Johnson, has become "a military juggernaut intent on world domination." Driven by a triumphalist ideology, an exaggerated sense of threats, and a self-serving military-industrial complex, this juggernaut is tightening its grip on much of the world. The Pentagon has replaced the State Department as the primary shaper of foreign policy. Military commanders in regional headquarters are modern-day proconsuls, warriordiplomats who direct the United States' imperial reach. Johnson fears that this military empire will corrode democracy, bankrupt the nation, spark opposition, and ultimately end in a Soviet-style collapse. The American ideology connotes
Your answers to questions 23 to 27 must be based on the review below, which is entitled "Illusions of Empire: Defining the New American Order".
Illusions of Empire: Defining the New American Order Source: www.foreignaffairs.org March/April 2004 (Adapted)
In his book The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic, Chalmers Johnson advances the disturbing claim that the United States' Cold War-era military power and far-flung base system have, in the last decade, been consolidated in a new form of global imperial rule. The United States, according to Johnson, has become "a military juggernaut intent on world domination." Driven by a triumphalist ideology, an exaggerated sense of threats, and a self-serving military-industrial complex, this juggernaut is tightening its grip on much of the world. The Pentagon has replaced the State Department as the primary shaper of foreign policy. Military commanders in regional headquarters are modern-day proconsuls, warriordiplomats who direct the United States' imperial reach. Johnson fears that this military empire will corrode democracy, bankrupt the nation, spark opposition, and ultimately end in a Soviet-style collapse. One of the author's fears in relation to the American military empire is that it will
Your answers to questions 23 to 27 must be based on the review below, which is entitled "Illusions of Empire: Defining the New American Order".
Illusions of Empire: Defining the New American Order Source: www.foreignaffairs.org March/April 2004 (Adapted)
In his book The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic, Chalmers Johnson advances the disturbing claim that the United States' Cold War-era military power and far-flung base system have, in the last decade, been consolidated in a new form of global imperial rule. The United States, according to Johnson, has become "a military juggernaut intent on world domination." Driven by a triumphalist ideology, an exaggerated sense of threats, and a self-serving military-industrial complex, this juggernaut is tightening its grip on much of the world. The Pentagon has replaced the State Department as the primary shaper of foreign policy. Military commanders in regional headquarters are modern-day proconsuls, warriordiplomats who direct the United States' imperial reach. Johnson fears that this military empire will corrode democracy, bankrupt the nation, spark opposition, and ultimately end in a Soviet-style collapse. According to the text, "the primary shaper of foreign policy"
Your answers to questions 23 to 27 must be based on the review below, which is entitled "Illusions of Empire: Defining the New American Order".
Illusions of Empire: Defining the New American Order Source: www.foreignaffairs.org March/April 2004 (Adapted)
In his book The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic, Chalmers Johnson advances the disturbing claim that the United States' Cold War-era military power and far-flung base system have, in the last decade, been consolidated in a new form of global imperial rule. The United States, according to Johnson, has become "a military juggernaut intent on world domination." Driven by a triumphalist ideology, an exaggerated sense of threats, and a self-serving military-industrial complex, this juggernaut is tightening its grip on much of the world. The Pentagon has replaced the State Department as the primary shaper of foreign policy. Military commanders in regional headquarters are modern-day proconsuls, warriordiplomats who direct the United States' imperial reach. Johnson fears that this military empire will corrode democracy, bankrupt the nation, spark opposition, and ultimately end in a Soviet-style collapse. According to the reviewer, Chalmers Johnson "advances" a disturbing claim. Therefore, he
Read the text below in order to answer questions 21 and 22:
Brazil's foreign policy: A giant stirs Source: www.economist.co.uk June 10, 2004 (Adapted)
It is a small force, but of huge symbolic significance. This month, 1,200 Brazilian troops arrived in Haiti, the country's biggest foreign military deployment since the second world war. Brazil is commanding a United Nations peacekeeping force of 6,700 mainly Latin American troops and 1,600 police which is taking over from American and French forces in the Caribbean island. This marks a new departure. Brazil has long been a gentle and introverted giant, content to be a bystander on the world stage. Now that is changing.
Analyze the alternatives below in order to choose the appropriate translation for the two sentences below into Portuguese: "Brazil has long been a gentle and introverted giant,.".