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  1. Dictionary
    personification
    /pəˌsɒnɪfɪˈkeɪʃn/

    noun

    • 1. the attribution of a personal nature or human characteristics to something non-human, or the representation of an abstract quality in human form: "the book provides a sustained account of how literary personification works"
    • 2. a figure intended to represent an abstract quality: "the knight is accompanied by two feminine personifications of vice"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Personification is a figure of speech that gives human attributes to nonhuman things or ideas. Learn how to use personification in writing, speech, and everyday expression, and how it differs from anthropomorphism.

  3. Learn the meaning of personification, a figure of speech that attributes human qualities to nonhuman things or ideas. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related articles.

  4. Personification is the act of giving a human quality or characteristic to something which is not human, or an example of this. Learn more about the meaning, usage and examples of personification in literature and everyday language.

  5. noun. the attribution of human nature or character to animals, inanimate objects, or abstract notions, especially as a rhetorical figure. the representation of a thing or abstraction in the form of a person, as in art. He is the personification of tact.

  6. People also ask

    • Definition of Personification
    • Examples of Personification from Common Speech
    • Significance of Personification in Literature
    • Examples of Personification from Literature
    • Test Your Knowledge of Personification
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    As a literary device, personification is the projection of characteristics that normally belong only to humans onto inanimate objects, animals, deities, or forces of nature. These characteristics can include verbs of actions that only humans do or adjectives that describe a human condition. The characteristics can also be emotions, feelings, or mot...

    We use many examples of personification in every day speech. Some characteristics have become quite common to attribute to certain things, such as the following: 1. Justice is blind 2. Her heart skipped a beat 3. The sun smiled down on them 4. The stars winked 5. The party died down 6. The city never sleeps 7. The wind howled 8. The iron gates look...

    Personification and anthropomorphism has been a part of storytelling for thousands of years, evident in Aesop’s Fables and fairy tales from many different cultures. Gods in myths and legends are often given human qualities even though they are distinctly not human. This makes them examples of personification. Personification has remained popular th...

    Example #1

    (A Midsummer Night’s Dreamby William Shakespeare) In this example of personification, Shakespeare uses the concept of the moon as a character. The moon is feminized (as often it is in literature, if given a gender) and said to be a governess of floods. The color of the moon lends to the depiction of “her anger” and she is said to cause more disease to spread due to her displeasure. Shakespeare thus gives the moon new descriptive qualities, emotions, and motivation.

    Example #2

    (Pride and Prejudiceby Jane Austen) In this excerpt from Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen writes about a heart that feels concern and resentment. The heart in question is of the character Elizabeth. It’s clear that Elizabethis the one divided between concern for her sister Jane and resentment for the others, yet Austen personifies Elizabeth’s heart to have these feelings to add some poetic sensibility to the sentence.

    Example #3

    (“Mending Wall” by Robert Frost) Robert Frost’s poem “Mending Wall” contains the famous line “Good fences make good neighbors.” This excerpt is from the beginning of the poem, and sets up a contrast between the neighbors who keep fixing the wall between them and the “something” that doesn’t love this wall. Though Frost never specifies what it is that “doesn’t love a wall,” we can take it to mean that nature revolts against artificial separations and borders. Winter cold causes the wall to bre...

    1. Choose the correct personification definition: A. The act of literally making something human. B. A person who strives to be the best he or she can be. C.A literary device which gives human qualities to nonhuman things. [spoiler title=”Answer to Question #1″] Answer: Cis the correct answer.[/spoiler] 2. Which of these lines from Shakespeare’s So...

    Personification is the projection of human characteristics onto non-human things, such as objects, animals, or forces of nature. Learn how personification can enhance literature, speech, and poetry with examples from Shakespeare, Austen, Frost, Steinbeck, and Oliver.

  7. Personification is a figurative device that attributes human qualities to non-human things. Learn how personification works, see examples from literature and music, and explore the difference between personification and anthropomorphism.

  8. PERSONIFICATION meaning: 1. a person who is a perfect example of something: 2. the act of giving a human quality or…. Learn more.