Surveyed
-Apex
He was surrounded by a dozen street urchins in rags.
There is no appositive in the sentence given.An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it.An appositive is set off in a sentence with a comma before and after it.Examples of the sentence with appositive are:My uncle, Joe, bought a dozen tulips.The noun 'Joe' renames the noun phrase 'My uncle'.My Uncle Joe, a friendly fellow, bought a dozen tulips.The noun phrase 'a friendly fellow' renames the noun phrase 'my Uncle Joe'.The man, my Uncle Joe, bought a dozen tulips.The noun phrase 'my Uncle Joe' renames the noun phrase 'the man'.Note: The only other noun (tulips) or noun phrase (a dozen tulips) in the sentence is the direct object of the verb 'bought'. When a noun or noun phrase follows a direct object to rename it, it's called an object complement.Example: My Uncle Joe bought a dozen tulips, yellow ones.
(about - concerning, or alternately an approximation) John and Jim were talking about last night's football game. There were about a dozen fires started by the lightning.
i can discern between a black person and a mix person.
a dozen
Pun. surveyed
Thoreau is using the literary device of puns in this sentence.
◘ To mark boundaries and to look over visually. surveyed
To mark boundaries and to look over visually-apex
In this pun by Thoreau, "surveyed" has a double meaning. The first meaning is to physically explore or examine the country by walking around it, and the second is to assess or study the country in a broader sense through observation and reflection.
There were a dozen eggs. Or for plural, there were dozens of them
Leaders like her are a dime a dozen.
He was surrounded by a dozen street urchins in rags.
We have a dozen fresh free range eggs delivered from Jadeacres farm every week.
No, Incorrect Grammar. Actual sentence is. This morning she received one dozen of red roses from her husband.
Please be 'country-specific' in your question.
evanston Illinois candna and Illinois