Ir para o conteúdo principal

Questões de Concurso – Aprova Concursos

Milhares de questões com o conteúdo atualizado para você praticar e chegar ao dia da prova preparado!


Exibir questões com:
Não exibir questões:
Minhas questões:
Filtros aplicados:

Dica: Caso encontre poucas questões de uma prova específica, filtre pela banca organizadora do concurso que você deseja prestar.

Exibindo questões de 311928 encontradas. Imprimir página Salvar em Meus Filtros
Folha de respostas:

  • 1
    • Certo
    • Errado
  • 2
    • a
    • b
    • c
    • d
    • e
  • 3
    • a
    • b
    • c
    • d
    • e
  • 4
    • a
    • b
    • c
    • d
    • e
  • 5
    • a
    • b
    • c
    • d
    • e
  • 6
    • a
    • b
    • c
    • d
    • e
  • 7
    • a
    • b
    • c
    • d
    • e
  • 8
    • a
    • b
    • c
    • d
    • e
  • 9
    • a
    • b
    • c
    • d
    • e
  • 10
    • Certo
    • Errado
  • 11
    • Certo
    • Errado
  • 12
    • Certo
    • Errado
  • 13
    • Certo
    • Errado
  • 14
    • Certo
    • Errado
  • 15
    • Certo
    • Errado

O processo de edição de vídeo permite unir, por meio de softwares específicos, imagens e sons em determinada ordem, de modo a formar cenas e sequências que produzem um sentido de continuidade espaço–temporal. Acerca desse assunto, julgue os itens subsequentes.

Mixagem é um processo de finalização de som que, realizado juntamente com a edição de imagem, combina diálogos, ruídos, som ambiente e trilha musical em um único canal sonoro.

Considerando-se os modelos teóricos de administração pública: patrimonialista, burocrático e gerencial, é correto afirmar que:

Quanto às formas de aquisição dos Bens Públicos, é correto afirmar:

Em se tratando dos Consórcios públicos, Terceiro Setor e o disposto na Instrução Normativa SLTI/MP n. 02 de 2008, é correto afirmar:

Sobre a Arguição de Descumprimento de Preceito Fundamental (ADPF), é correto afirmar que:

Sobre a Política Urbana, Agrícola, Fundiária e da Reforma Agrária, é correto afirmar que:

Questions 31 through 33 refer to the following text.



The IRS Chief Counsel is appointed by the President of

the United States, with the advice and consent of the U.S.

Senate, and serves as the chief legal advisor to the IRS

Commissioner on all matters pertaining to the interpretation,

administration, and enforcement of the Internal Revenue

Code, as well as all other legal matters. Under the IRS

Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, the Chief Counsel

reports to both the IRS Commissioner and the Treasury

General Counsel.



Attorneys in the Chief Counsel's Office serve as lawyers for

the IRS. They provide the IRS and taxpayers with guidance

on interpreting Federal tax laws correctly, represent the

IRS in litigation, and provide all other legal support required

to carry out the IRS mission.



Chief Counsel received 95,929 cases and closed

94,323 cases during fiscal year 2012. Of the new cases

received, and cases closed, the majority related to tax law

enforcement and litigation, including Tax Court litigation;

collection, bankruptcy, and summons advice and litigation;

Appellate Court litigation; criminal tax; and enforcement

advice and assistance.



In Fiscal Year 2012, Chief Counsel received 31,295

Tax Court cases involving taxpayers contesting an IRS

determination that they owed additional tax. The total

amount of tax and penalty in dispute at the end of the fiscal

year was almost $6.6 billion.



(Source: Internal Revenue Service Data Book, 2012.)

According to the passage, the IRS's chief legal advisor is

Questions 34 through 38 refer to the following text.



We've been keeping our veterinarian in business lately.

First Sammy, our nine-year-old golden retriever, needed

surgery. (She's fine now.) Then Inky, our curious cat,

burned his paw. (He'll be fine, too.) At our last visit, as we

were writing our fourth (or was it the fifth?) consecutive

check to the veterinary hospital, there was much joking

about how vet bills should be tax-deductible. After all, pets

are dependents, too, right? (Guffaws all around.)



Now, halfway through tax-filing season, comes news

that pets are high on the list of unusual deductions

taxpayers try to claim. From routine pet expenses to the

costs of adopting a pet to, yes, pets as "dependents," tax

accountants have heard it all this year, according to the

Minnesota Society of Certified Public Accountants, which

surveys its members annually about the most outlandish

tax deductions proposed by clients. Most of these doggy

deductions don't hunt, but, believe it or not, some do. Could

there be a spot for Sammy and Inky on our 1040?



Scott Kadrlik, a certified public accountant in Eden Prairie,

Minn., who moonlights as a stand-up comedian (really!),

gave me a dog's-eye view of the tax code: "In most cases

our family pets are just family pets," he says. They cannot

be claimed as dependents, and you cannot deduct the

cost of their food, medical care or other expenses. One

exception is service dogs. If you require a Seeing Eye

dog, for example, your canine's costs are deductible as

a medical expense. Occasionally, man's best friend also

is man's best business deduction. The Doberman that

guards the junk yard can be deductible as a business

expense of the junk-yard owner, says Mr. Kadrlik. Ditto the

convenience-store cat that keeps the rats at bay.



For most of us, though, our pets are hobbies at most.

Something's a hobby if, among other things, it hasn't turned

a profit in at least three of the past five years (or two of the

past seven years in the case of horse training, breeding

or racing). In that case, you can't deduct losses—only

expenses to the extent of income in the same year. So if

your beloved Bichon earns $100 for a modeling gig, you

could deduct $100 worth of vet bills (or dog food or doggy

attire).



(Source: Carolyn Geer, The Wall Street Journal, retrieved on 13 March

2014 - slightly adapted)

The phrase “Guffaws all around" (paragraph 1) shows that those hearing the conversation

Questions 34 through 38 refer to the following text.



We've been keeping our veterinarian in business lately.

First Sammy, our nine-year-old golden retriever, needed

surgery. (She's fine now.) Then Inky, our curious cat,

burned his paw. (He'll be fine, too.) At our last visit, as we

were writing our fourth (or was it the fifth?) consecutive

check to the veterinary hospital, there was much joking

about how vet bills should be tax-deductible. After all, pets

are dependents, too, right? (Guffaws all around.)



Now, halfway through tax-filing season, comes news

that pets are high on the list of unusual deductions

taxpayers try to claim. From routine pet expenses to the

costs of adopting a pet to, yes, pets as "dependents," tax

accountants have heard it all this year, according to the

Minnesota Society of Certified Public Accountants, which

surveys its members annually about the most outlandish

tax deductions proposed by clients. Most of these doggy

deductions don't hunt, but, believe it or not, some do. Could

there be a spot for Sammy and Inky on our 1040?



Scott Kadrlik, a certified public accountant in Eden Prairie,

Minn., who moonlights as a stand-up comedian (really!),

gave me a dog's-eye view of the tax code: "In most cases

our family pets are just family pets," he says. They cannot

be claimed as dependents, and you cannot deduct the

cost of their food, medical care or other expenses. One

exception is service dogs. If you require a Seeing Eye

dog, for example, your canine's costs are deductible as

a medical expense. Occasionally, man's best friend also

is man's best business deduction. The Doberman that

guards the junk yard can be deductible as a business

expense of the junk-yard owner, says Mr. Kadrlik. Ditto the

convenience-store cat that keeps the rats at bay.



For most of us, though, our pets are hobbies at most.

Something's a hobby if, among other things, it hasn't turned

a profit in at least three of the past five years (or two of the

past seven years in the case of horse training, breeding

or racing). In that case, you can't deduct losses—only

expenses to the extent of income in the same year. So if

your beloved Bichon earns $100 for a modeling gig, you

could deduct $100 worth of vet bills (or dog food or doggy

attire).



(Source: Carolyn Geer, The Wall Street Journal, retrieved on 13 March

2014 - slightly adapted)

Among the domesticated animals considered eligible for tax deductions are

A norma NBR ISO/IEC 27001:2006 foi elaborada para prover

um modelo de estabelecimento, implementação, operação,

monitoração, análise crítica, manutenção e melhoria do sistema de

gestão de sistemas de informação (SGSI). Com relação a esse

assunto, julgue os itens que se seguem.

A referida norma adota o modelo de melhoria contínua PDCA,

que apresenta as seguintes etapas: PLAN — estabelecer o

SGSI; DO — implementar e operar o SGSI; CHECK —

monitorar e analisar criticamente o SGSI; e ACT — manter e

melhorar o SGSI.

Julgue os itens subsequentes, relativos aos sistemas de processamento transacional.

No nível gerencial médio das empresas, encontram–se os sistemas de informações gerenciais, os sistemas de apoio a decisão e os sistemas de apoio aos executivos.

Julgue os itens a seguir, acerca de sistemas de gestão de conteúdo.

Os portais corporativos são construídos com a finalidade de oferecer ao público em geral espaços para que ele realize visitas virtuais às empresas.

Considerando os padrões de interoperabilidade do governo eletrônico (e–Ping) brasileiro, julgue os próximos itens.

No que tange às operações com o Poder Executivo, as autarquias, integrantes da administração pública indireta, não estão obrigadas a adotar os padrões e políticas contidas na e–Ping.

No que se refere à linguagem PHP, julgue os itens subsecutivos.

O script PHP abaixo está correto e exibe o número 9 como saída.

Com relação à gestão de requisitos e de configuração, julgue os itens subsequentes.

No processo tradicional de desenvolvimento em cascata, a gestão de configuração começa a atuar no momento em que todos os testes são concluídos.

© Aprova Concursos - Al. Dr. Carlos de Carvalho, 1482 - Curitiba, PR - 0800 727 6282