email subscription

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Thursday, May 14, 2020

what is Personification in writing.

https://activewordz.wordpress.com/2021/09/09/what-does-the-fall-of-the-afghan-government-mean-for-europe/
What Is Personification in Writing?

Personification is a concept and taste of figurative language that assigns human traits such as feelings, emotions, and behaviors, objects, animals, or ideas. For example, we have a statement “the story jumped off the page” is an example of personification.
But what is a figurative language? 
Basically, when an author uses some words or phrases in an unusual or imaginative manner, in order to elaborate his inner feelings about a specific situation. Where the reader senses the author’s emotions and co-relate his emotions with non-human entities.
Authors often use personification throughout their writing to make a story or statement livelier. Figurative language is a storytelling technique that uses nonliteral phrases to make text and information more interesting and attractive. 

What Is the Purpose of Personification in Writing?

Personification elaborates and stretches the demarcations of reality to make literature and poetry more attractive and vivid. Personification can also be used to:

·         Better explain concepts and ideas. Personification explains the concepts or ideas in a precise manner. Where a reader enjoys and easily compares the meaning concepts. The non-human entities are portrayed in such a way that a reader feels that they have the ability to perform like human beings.

·         Forge a deeper connection with the reader. Giving objects, ideas, and animals human qualities makes them instantly relatable to readers. For example, Voiceless voices, the noise of silence.


What Are the Other Types of Figurative Language in Writing?

Figurative language is a writing technique that uses a non-literal description to create a more vivid image, important for writing rich, compelling prose. Here are some of the most widely-used types of figurative language:
·         Simile. A simile is a direct comparison between two things that usually uses the words “like” or “as.” For example, “Black like a crow.”

·         Metaphor. A metaphor is a non-literal hidden comparison that says something is something else. For example, “Our cousin is the black sheep of the family.”

·         IronyThe irony is the contrast expression that signifies the opposite of what appears to be real versus actual reality, in a humorous effect. For example, the police station gets robbed.

·         Hyperbole. A hyperbole is an extreme exaggeration to make a point. For example I have told you to clear the mess a thousand times! It was so cold; I saw polar bears wearing blankets. 

Examples of Personification in Literature
:
An analogy is a statement that compares sets of words that are alike in some way. In addition, the words are antonyms-words that have opposite meanings. A test item may begin with a pair such as strong and weak. You must then choose another pair of words with a similar relationship. Since strong and weak are opposites, the second pair of words should also be opposites.
For example, Scissors are to hair as a nail cutter is to nail.

Sometimes colons are used to shorten analogies. A single colon separates the words in each pair, and a double colon separates the two pairs. 

For example, “strong is to weak, as young is to old” is shown as; 

Strong: weak::young: old



An Allegory:     is a figure of speech in which abstract ideas and principles are described in terms of characters, figures, and events in a story, poem, or picture that can be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning, typically a moral or political one.
For example, the declaration of former U.S. President George W. Bush was allegorical about a country when he used the term “Axis of Evil”.


Anthropomorphism is the literal portrait of non-human things as having human traits. E.g. An ant working as a doctor, artist, a police officer.

myth:             it is also an example of personification that assign human traits to gods, animals, or supernatural entities. For example, chines assign human traits to dragons, Japanese folklore portrays foxes as highly intellect beings.  


5 comments:

  1. An interesting topic and I like the detailed analysis of personification in fiction. Informative and helpful.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Very nice article.
    plz visit my blog https://kidscricketcoaching.blogspot.com/2020/05/episode-16-back-foot-drive-29052020.html

    ReplyDelete