(ITA - 2005 - 1 FASE ) As questões de 11 a 17 referem-se aos seguintes parágrafos:
1 The smaller boys were known by the generic title
of “littluns”. The decrease in size, from Ralph down, was
gradual; and though there was a dubious region inhabited by
Simon and Robert and Maurice, nevertheless no one had any
5 difficulty in recognizing biguns at one end and littluns at the
other. The undoubted liltluns, those aged about six, led a
quite distinct, and at the same time intense, life of their own.
They ate most of the day, picking fruit where they could reach
it and not particular about ripeness and quality. They were
0 used now to stomach-aches and a sort of chronic diarrhoea.
They suffered untold terrors in the dark and huddled together for
comfort. Apart from food and sleep, they found time for
play, aimless and trivial, among the white sand by the bright
water. They cried for their mothers much less often than
15 might have been expected; they were very brown, and filthily
dirty. They obeyed the summons of the conch, partly because
Ralph blew it, and he was big enough to be a link with the
adult world of authority; and partly because they enjoyed the
entertainment of the assemblies. But otherwise they seldom
20 bothered with the biguns and their passionately emotional
and corporate life was their own.
They had built castles in the sand at the bar of the
little river. These castles were about one foot high and were
decorated with shells, withered flowers, and interesting
25 stones. Round the castles was a complex of marks, tracks,
walls, railway lines, that were of significance only if inspected
with the eye at beach-level. The littluns played here, if not
happily at least with absorbed attention; and often as many as
three of them would play the same game together.
30
1 The smaller boys were known by the generic title
of “littluns”. The decrease in size, from Ralph down, was
gradual; and though there was a dubious region inhabited by
Simon and Robert and Maurice, nevertheless no one had any
5 difficulty in recognizing biguns at one end and littluns at the
other. The undoubted liltluns, those aged about six, led a
quite distinct, and at the same time intense, life of their own.
They ate most of the day, picking fruit where they could reach
it and not particular about ripeness and quality. They were
0 used now to stomach-aches and a sort of chronic diarrhoea.
They suffered untold terrors in the dark and huddled together for
comfort. Apart from food and sleep, they found time for
play, aimless and trivial, among the white sand by the bright
water. They cried for their mothers much less often than
15 might have been expected; they were very brown, and filthily
dirty. They obeyed the summons of the conch, partly because
Ralph blew it, and he was big enough to be a link with the
adult world of authority; and partly because they enjoyed the
entertainment of the assemblies. But otherwise they seldom
20 bothered with the biguns and their passionately emotional
and corporate life was their own.
They had built castles in the sand at the bar of the
little river. These castles were about one foot high and were
decorated with shells, withered flowers, and interesting
25 stones. Round the castles was a complex of marks, tracks,
walls, railway lines, that were of significance only if inspected
with the eye at beach-level. The littluns played here, if not
happily at least with absorbed attention; and often as many as
three of them would play the same game together.
30
O pronome “they” em “They had built castles…” (linha 13), refere-se a
the biguns and the littluns.
Simon, Roger and Maurice.
Ralph, Simon, Roger and Maurice.
the littluns
the biguns.