13
What have you noticed about the pictures you have just seen?

Personification and apostrophe

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Personification and apostrophe

What have you noticed about the pictures you have just seen?

Page 2: Personification and apostrophe

Don’t be in a rush, dear. Give an answer first.

Page 3: Personification and apostrophe
Page 4: Personification and apostrophe
Page 5: Personification and apostrophe

Fantastic answer!

You’re right.

All these pictures show

how inanimate objects are

being considered and

treated like human beings.

Page 6: Personification and apostrophe

Personification and apostrophe are figures of speech that give a creative effect to our language by

associating life to non-living objects.

Page 7: Personification and apostrophe

Similes and metaphors do the same thing:they give life to non-living objects.

The only difference is that, personification gives human attributes to inanimate

objects and abstract ideas, while apostrophe only addresses them, as if they

are present and alive.

Page 8: Personification and apostrophe

1) Dearest Moon, please shine as bright as her smile tonight so when I look at you, I’ll feel inspired.APOSTROPHE

2) The moon smiled at me last night. PERSONIFICATION

Page 9: Personification and apostrophe

3) Oh, Weekdays! Why must you be this far away? APOSTROPHE

4) The weekdays are calling me. I can hear them whisper my name. PERSONIFICATION

Page 10: Personification and apostrophe

APOSTROPHE AND PERSONIFICATION IN POETRY

Page 11: Personification and apostrophe

Busy old fool, unruly Sun,Why do you,Through windows, and through curtains, call onus?Must to thy motions lovers’ seasons run?Saucy pedantic wretch,

The Sun Rising by John DonneRetrieved from: http://literarydevices.net/apostrophe/

Page 12: Personification and apostrophe

“Oh, stranger of the future!Oh, inconceivable being!Whatever the shape of your house,However you scoot from place to place,No matter how strange and colorless the clothes you may wear,I bet nobody likes a wet dog either.I bet everyone in your pub,Even the children, pushes her away.”

To a Stranger Born in Some Distant Country Hundreds of Years from Now by Billy CollinsRetrieved from: http://www.apostropheexamples.com/apostrophe/o-stranger-of-the-futureo-inconceivable-b/1037/

Page 13: Personification and apostrophe

My food loves to prance, to jump, to dance;I wait for the time, I wait for the chance!Beans and turkey are doing the twist!Peas, plumbs, apples or mangos;on to the walls, they're doing the tango!

My Dinner Loves DancingRetrieved from: http://examples.yourdictionary.com/humorous-examples-of-personification-in-poetry.html