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How does the conclusion of the prologue support the
authors' purpose? Select two options.
It introduces the topic that will be addressed next.
It provides information about the authors.
Read the passage from Sugar Changed the World
Sugar is a taste we all want, a taste we all crave. People
throughout the planet everywhere have been willing to do
anything, anything at all, to get that touch of sweetness.
We even know exactly how thrilling it was to taste sugar for
the first time. When the Lewis and Clark Expedition met up
with the Shoshone, who had little previous contact with Old
World products, Sacagawea gave a tiny piece of sugar to a
chief. He loved it, saying it was "the best thing he had ever
tasted." Sugar created a hunger, a need, which swept from
one corner of the world to another, bringing the most
terrible misery and destruction, but then, too, the most
inspiring ideas of liberty.
It states why the topic is relevant to readers.
It cites sources the authors used in the text.
It explains how the authors came to study the su
Sugar changed the world.
We begin that story with a man who could never know
enough
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Respuesta :

   The authors’ purpose in the conclusion of the prologue of the passage from Sugar Changed the World is supported by the following topics:

A.  It introduces the topic that will be addressed next.  

B. It provides information about the authors.

Through  their personal family histories with sugar, husband and wife Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos  frame the book introducing themselves and the topic to the reader. In this prologue the authors provide some estimules to invite  readers to taste the sweetness and bitterness of this global history lesson.

A: It introduces the topic that will be addressed next.

C: It states why the topic is relevant to readers.