Answer: The third one is the correct statement.
Explanation: The third one is correct because if you notice in passage 1 line 2 and Passage 2 line 1 both authors are expressing how Newspapers are not that popular anymore and are quite irrelevant since we have internet and how whatever happens on that specific day and hour or two later and article about it shedding more light about situation/ scandal etc comes whereas we read it a day after like how in passage two it states why read todays news tomorrow. (The author is talking about the news paper).
When added to the word detect, the suffix which means "a person who" is -ive.
"A person who" means that you need to create a noun which refers to a person by adding that suffix. If you add -ive to detect, you will get the noun detective, which is obviously a person.
The word detectary doesn't exist, and the word detection doesn't refer to a person, but rather the act of detecting.
Your question is incomplete because you have not provided the paragraph, which is the following:
Elizabethans do not understand infection and contagion as we do. It is not that they are completely ignorant as to how illnesses spread—physicians believe they know perfectly well—it is rather that their understanding is very different from ours. The principal ideas underpinning most Elizabethan medical thinking come from Galen, who lived in the second century A.D. Physicians will cite him as an unquestionable authority when they explain to you that your health depends on a balance of the four humors: yellow bile or choler, black bile, phlegm, and blood. If there is too much choler in your body, you will grow choleric; too much blood and you will be sanguine; too much phlegm and you will be phlegmatic; and too much black bile makes you melancholic. It is from these imbalances that sickness arises.
Answer:
c. It details the belief that bodily humors affect health.
Explanation:
According to the paragraph from "The Time Traveler's Guide to Elizabethan England," the author Ian Mortimer makes reference to Galen's beliefs, which were spread to the physician world and everyone took for granted. In fact, they spoke about how four humors like yellow bile or choler, black bile, phlegm and blood influenced a person's health and how an unbalanced distribution of them produced sickness.