yes
The epidemic was caused by a highly contagious virus.
The virus has hit epidemic proportions, in just two weeks.
Flu is always caused a virus, not bacteria, so no flu epidemic will be due to a bacterial agent. This is true of the 1918 "Spanish Flu", it was caused by a virus.
If on Eradicator Epidemic Virus' activation, you have two cards on the field that it will destroy, then you can chain Starlight Road.
similar cards would be eradicator epidemic virus and deck devastation virus.
virus, epidemic, cold, the flu
The flu virus causes epidemics because so many people are infected at one time.
Lava Golem's Special Summon does not start a chain, so you cannot chain Epidemic Virus when it is tributing the monsters. You must use it before it would be Summoned or the intended target for Virus probably would not be there for it use.
No. If it were that easy aids wouldn't be an epidemic in some countries.
The words "bug," "virus," "epidemic," and "illness" are all related to health and disease. They refer to different aspects of infectious diseases, with "bug" often used colloquially to describe a pathogen, "virus" being a specific type of pathogen, "epidemic" indicating a rapid increase in disease cases, and "illness" representing the overall experience of being unwell. Together, they encompass the spectrum of how diseases can affect individuals and populations.
Swine flu started as an epidemic in Mexico and quickly spread throughout the world to become a true pandemic in 2009.Is this just an outbreak of measles in our local area, or is this an epidemic in the entire region?An epidemic of small pox quickly spread through the city.
A virus is a micro-organism which causes disease by landing on a cell, breaking into it, then forcing the cell to make copies of it. The cell dies of exaustion, and the copies of the virus (plus the original virus) go on to other cell to wreak havok upon. An epidemic on the other hand, is when lots of people in the same area (though it may eventually spead out), aren't immune to a highly contagious disease allowing it to spread widely around an area.