The answer to your question is option <u>A. Traders brought not only sugar but also other valuable items to Europe,</u>
Explanation:
The passage given here supports option A because 90% of the passage given is dedicated to list all the goods that Italian traders brought to Europe from Muslim countries.
Option B is not the right answer because we can't know for sure if fruits and fabrics were indeed the most popular traded goods. Option C is not either becuse the passage only gives one line to explain where the name of certain things came from, and option D is not the answer because we don't know for sure if after seeing these things, Europeans decided to produce similar fabrics.
The inference that this passage best support is that Traders brought not only sugar but also other valuable items to Europe.
Explanation:
The information in this excerpt from "Sugar Changed the World" by Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos shows all the examples of different products to sell that the trades brought from Muslims and were not available in Europe such as several fruits and fabrics that were very popular but not produced in that continent.
<span>Those
old-timers were rather womanish, some of them, he thought. All a man
had to do was to keep his head, and he was all right. Any man who was a
man could travel alone.</span>
Violet and Peony’s father is the minor character in the story. He is static and flat. Mr. Lindsey is defined by his common sense personality. His personality stays the same throughout the story. Even after seeing the unique appearance of the snow-image, he doesn’t believe that it’s a miracle. When he tries to apply logic to the situation by warming the snow-image in the house, he destroys it.