I would say noun clause, but seeing as that is not an option, appositive?
Answer:
Hunters
Explanation:
The author uses verbs like invading and capturing to make it seem like the photographers are "hunting" the lions.
The connotative meaning of the word "heart" is passion. Unlike denotative meaning, which is the literal meaning of a word as defined in a dictionary, connotative meaning is the meaning that depends on the emotional context. So, a heart has one connotation when we speak about a surgery, and a totally different connotation when we talk about a broken heart, for example.
In this poem, the speaker tells us how "they" coerce a man to give all of his being to the political cause that he might or might not believe in. In the aforementioned line, the man has to give his breast, heart, and shoulders - his soul, passion, and strength, therefore everything he has, as if it were a commodity.
I am 100% sure about this.
Answer:
Hester recognizes a small, rather deformed man standing on the outskirts of the crowd and clutches Pearl fiercely to her bosom. Meanwhile, the man, a stranger to Boston, recognizes Hester and is horror-struck.
Inquiring, the man learns of Hester's history, her crime (adultery), and her sentence: to stand on the scaffold for three hours and to wear the symbolic letter A for the rest of her life. The stranger also learns that Hester refuses to name the man with whom she had the sexual affair. This knowledge greatly upsets him, and he vows that Hester's unnamed partner "will be known! — he will be known! — he will be known!"