Answer:
As sugar became increasingly available to the English, they wanted to acquire even more of it.
Explanation:
This is the only option that can be inferred from the things stated in the excerpt. We can see that King Henry III negotiation skills had nothing to do with the amount of sugar he could get, as it was difficult for everyone to buy it. Sugar was very scarce and therefore very expensive. The passage doesn't describe England as the one that dominated trade with the Muslim World before Venbice did, so we can't infer it. It could be true or not, the text doesn't have the information to know it, we only are informed that when Venice took control, the sugar trade was expanded making the fairs unecessary.
<u>The thing that we know is that the English always bought more and more sugar as it was more available, King Henry III first bought three pounds, then four, later three hundred, one hundred years later the English bought thousands of pounds.</u> Therefore the demand increased.
<span>Both use figurative language.</span>
The reason why this can happen is because of the transformative journey that Jin Wang is on. At first, Jin Wang is ashamed of being Chinese, and wants to appear as white as possible. Wei-Chen is fully Chinese, and because of this, he is a foil, as he is a character that highlights the characteristics of the protagonist by contrasting them with his own, which are the opposite.
However, as the story progresses, Jin Wang becomes even less similar to Wei-Chen, as he kisses Suzy and as he transforms into Danny. Jin Wang, therefore, not only contrasts with Wei-Chen, but is in open opposition to him. This makes Wei-Chen the antagonist.
7.it's= it is
8.there's=there is
9.can't=can not
10.what's=what is
11.joe's=Joe is
12.he'll=He will
13.shouldn't=should not
14.they'd=they would
15.where's=Where is and I'm= I am
16.bell's=bell is