Personfication

    As a figure of speech it has a very long history; its Greek name is prosopopoeia. Examples include: "The pencil
    flew out of my hand" "The tree jumped into the road in front of my car", and "With an evil scowl, the stormcloud
    thundered its disapproval". Personification is widely used in poetry and in other art forms.
    used in poetry and in other art forms.

    Personification's treatment of inanimate objects is very similar to the figure of speech called the pathetic fallacy;
    the key difference is that personification is direct and explicit in the ascription of life and sentience to the thing in
    question, whereas the pathetic fallacy is much broader and more allusive. Another related rhetorical device is
    apostrophe; this entails not speaking about, but speaking to, a personified entity or an absent person. All these
    tropes should be understood as separate from anthropomorphism, which ascribes human attributes to any non-
    human entities, in particular to animals and other creatures.

    An example of personification can be found in John Keats's "To Autumn," the fall season is personified as "sitting
    careless on a granary floor" (line 14) and "drowsed with the fume of poppies" (line 17), and John Donne's Holy
    Sonnet VI, in which death is personified as a "slave to fate, chance, kings and desperate men" (line 9), and
    "poor" (line 4).

    Personification is also widely used by individuals and mass media outlets when describing the actions of
    governments or corporations. Such as, "U.S. Defends Sale of Ports Company to Arab Nation" [1] or "Microsoft
    embarrassed one final time over SP2". [2] Personification is frequently employed in media headlines and cartoons.


    Many familiar phrases and images employ personification -- for example, "blind justice".

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