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Read the excerpt from The Time Traveler's Guide to Elizabethan England. Another familiar disease is malaria, which Elizabethans refer to as ague or fever. You might associate this with more tropical countries of the modern world but in marshy areas in sixteenth-century England, such as the Lincolnshire and Cambridgeshire Fens, the Norfolk Broads, and Romney Marsh in Kent, it kills thousands. No one suspects that it has anything to do with mosquitoes; rather people believe it is the corrupted air arising from the low-lying dank marsh (hence the term mal-aria). As a result, you will have no chance of getting proper treatment for the disease. How does the paragraph expand on the central idea that malaria was a deadly disease in Elizabethan England? It proves that malaria is spread by mosquitoes in swampy areas. It gives a detailed description of the area known as Romney Marsh. It explains Elizabethan misconceptions about the spread of malaria. It compares common malaria symptoms to influenza symptoms.

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Answer:C

Step-by-step explanation:

User Anhtuannd
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Based on the excerpt, the paragraph expands the central idea about malaria being a deadly disease in the way that Elizabethans were not aware at all of how malaria was spread among people at that time, so because of their lack of knowledge about the illness, they could not find proper treatment to cure it. Thus, the best option that supports the idea is the third sentence "It explains Elizabethan misconceptions about the spread of malaria." Additional support for the idea is that there is no comparison between one disease and another; it is briefly mentioned Romney Marsh with no description; and malaria is not only associated with swampy areas but with tropical areas, too.

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