no, because true happiness comes from love and everyone knows that you cant buy love
Answer:
I believe the detail that best supports the inference is:
D. When he first hears the moor's silence broken, he was exultant.
Explanation:
The inference states that Holmes was expecting something to appear on the moor. If he was expecting it, he would probably be happy, excited to hear a noise, since it would be proof that he was right, that something was indeed going to show up. That's why the detail "When he first hears the moor's silence broken, he was exultant" is the best to support such inference. It mentions Holmes's reaction - a reaction that confirms his expectation. Had he not expected anything to appear, he would not have been exultant, but would have been scared or surprised instead.
The correct answer is “The authors include details about the changes in diets over time to inform readers about how sugar has transformed what we eat.” Although there is a hidden subtext that indicates that modern diets are indeed unhealthy because of the excessive intake of sugar, the author’s main concern is to illustrate above all the economic importance of sugar and how it affects other unrelated issues. It also provides hints as to what such importance means for nutrition, social justice and economic justice. The author does that by enumerating the historical facts about the indirect and direct effects of sugar on the lives of people (poor factory workers, slaves), the effect on the economy (the wealth they gained, the trade connections they made, and the banking systems they developed in the slave and sugar trade), the effect on culinary practices (jams, cakes, syrups, and tea) and finally its effects on human health (Americans eat an average of 140 pounds every year).
In order to escape the spread of the plague, Prince Prospero invites “a thousand hale and light hearted friends from among the knights and dames of his court” to seal themselves “in deep seclusion” in an abbey of his castle, allowing no one to enter or leave.