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Observe a imagem a seguir.


Parece uma bela paisagem agrícola, não fosse o fato de estar situada no Parque Nacional Grande Sertão Veredas, que foi

criado, justamente, para a proteção de áreas de Cerrado em Minas Gerais. As áreas de Cerrado em Minas Gerais sofrem muitos

problemas ambientais, como

O texto permite afirmar que a Revolta da Vacina

Considerando o contexto da Segunda Guerra Mundial e o avanço dos exércitos alemães na Europa, é correto afirmar que a situação apresentada no filme A Volta

Analise a tabela abaixo.


O desequilíbrio na distribuição de terras demonstrado na tabela pode ser apontado como um dos responsáveis pela

Attention: Read the text and answer questions 21 to 29.

A Writer's Beginnings in Kenya By ALEXANDRA FULLER

ONE DAY I WILL WRITE ABOUT THIS PLACE

A Memoir By Binyavanga Wainaina 256 pp. Graywolf Press. $24.

Dear reader, I'll save you precious time: skip this review and head directly to the bookstore for Binyavanga Wainaina's stand-upand-cheer coming-of-age memoir, "One Day I Will Write About This Place." [CONNECTIVE] written by an East African and set in East and Southern Africa, Wainaina's book is not just for Afrophiles or lovers of post-colonial literature. This is a book for anyone who still finds the nourishment of a well-written tale preferable to the empty-calorie jolt of a celebrity confessional or Swedish mystery. Not that Wainaina is likely to judge [PRONOUN] taste in books. In fact, at its heart, this is a story about how Wainaina was almost [TO EAT] alive by his addiction to reading anything available. "I am starting to read storybooks," he says of his 11-year-old self, growing up in Nakuru, Kenya. "If words, in English, arranged on the page have the power to control my body in this world, this sound and language can close its folds, like a fan, and I will slide into its world, where things are arranged differently." As he leaves childhood [ADVERB 1] − "My nose sweats a lot these days, and my armpits smell, and I wake [ADVERB 2] a lot at night all wriggly and hot, like Congo rumba music" − Wainaina retreats further from the confusing realities of politics and adolescence and his big multinational family (his father a Kenyan businessman and farm owner, his mother a Ugandan salon owner) and deeper into a world of words. At school he is told, and believes, that he is supposed to become a doctor or a lawyer, an engineer or a scientist. But Wainaina seems constitutionally incapable of absorbing anything that would further a career in these fields. By the time Wainaina leaves Kenya to attend university in South Africa, a country smoldering with the last poisonous fumes of apartheid, his addiction to books is complete. He drops out of school to pursue more completely a life of reading.

Adapted from http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/14/books/review/one-day-i-will-write-about-this-place-by-binyavanga-wainaina-book-review.html?pagewanted=all)

The missing [CONNECTIVE] is

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