When you look up a word in the dictionary, you will find its literal<span> </span>denotative<span> meaning. However, the emotions and associations connected to a word is known as its connotative meaning. Depending on our experiences, certain words have a positive, negative, or neutral connotation.
so basically what emotion does a word emmit.
so the negative connotation would be begging</span>
Answer:
Those details help establish the setting because:
A. They give the sense that nature has taken over a once-urban area.
Explanation:
This question is about the short story "By the Waters of Babylon", by Vincent Benét. The details mentioned, "stone or metal,” "many pigeons,” "towers,” and "wild cats that roam the god-roads,” appear once the main character, John, arrives to a forbidden place. John is a priest in a post-apocalyptic future. After mankind has destroyed most of itself by misusing technology, the remaining social groups retrogress to a more primitive way of living, filled with superstitions concerning metal.
<u>The forbidden place where John arrives is New York City, or at least what is left of it. Nature has taken over, reclaiming the space that had previously belonged to it, before man arrived and conquered. Now, the streets (god-roads) are paths where wild cats roam. The towers (buildings) serve as nests for pigeons. There is no sign or "smell of man left, on stone or metal." Nature has conquered this once-urban area back.</u>
<span> "Ambush," O’Brien describes killing a man while serving in war. He had no intention of killing him—he reacted without thinking. O’Brien feels guilty about having killed another human being, even though his fellow soldier tries to soothe him with the logic that the man would have been killed eventually anyway. However, trying to justify having killed someone, O’Brien explains that his training as a soldier prompted him to act involuntarily when he lobbed the grenade upon spotting an enemy soldier. Twenty years later, long after the war has ended, O’Brien is unable to admit to his daughter, Kathleen, that he has killed another person. He feels guilt and denial about having killed a man, and experiences recurrent flashbacks and visions. Through his story, O’Brien conveys that a soldier is a changed person after he has witnessed such a war, and those who have not been in a war cannot begin to understand the emotional turmoil that soldiers go through.</span>
buwan grabbed the cage and shook it. "Sister, my sister," cried Araw, "please be careful, because that is a present for our father."