pathetic fallacy is when you match your mood to the weather 1 example is:
Pathetic Fallacy is when nature mirrors a character's mood,emotions, feelings or thoughts.
pathetic fallacy is when the mood match's the weather.
e.g. He was miserable when it started to rain
Compares a characters mood/emotions to a natural thing e.g. the sadness was like a leaves falling off a tree.
Pathetic fallacy
pathetic fallacy
Snow white and the seven dwarfs
u r not pathetic u just like music and both have 2 do with music
The word 'fallacy', pronounced 'fal-uss-ee', ('-al-' as in gal) isn't a bad word, in the sense of being offensive or rude. It means a false idea or belief.Perhaps you are thinking of the word 'phallus', meaning an image, or representation, of a penis, or a penis itself? 'Phallus' is pronounced 'fal-uss', so it sounds similar to 'fallacy'; it isn't a bad word, either.The noun 'fallacy' came into English in the fifteenth century, from a Latin form describing deception; it has some variations in meaning:Deceptiveness;An argument, or a statement, based on a mistaken belief which makes the entire argument, or statement, false;An error in reasoning which makes an argument false;A misconception which is the result of faulty reasoning;A factoid; a false belief, idea, or theory, that many people believe to be true simply because so many people have come to believe it is true; for example: 'The notion that anyone can catch a cold simply from being in the rain is a fallacy; a factoid.'
It could be either depending on if the subject is the person or the weather.
"Pathetic Fallacy"
Pathetic fallacy
The anthropomorphic fallacy (also known as the pathetic fallacy) is the attribution of human thoughts and emotions to animals or inanimate objects. For example, to claim that your tomato plants aren't growing very well because they "hate" hot weather would be to commit the anthropomorphic fallacy. Plants are not capable of hate.
Pathetic fallacy
pathetic fallacy
Pathetic fallacy is a literary device where human emotions are attributed to nature or inanimate objects, often reflecting a character's mood. Personification is when human traits or qualities are given to animals, objects, or abstract concepts. So, while both involve attributing human characteristics to non-human entities, pathetic fallacy specifically relates to emotions in nature.
Pathetic fallacy is used in "Jane Eyre" when Jane is experiencing intense emotions, and the weather mirrors her feelings, such as the stormy weather reflecting her inner turmoil when Mr. Rochester's secret is revealed. Another example is when the misty and gloomy weather mirrors Jane's sense of isolation and uncertainty at Thornfield Hall.
Snow white and the seven dwarfs
pathetic fallacy.
Shakespeare uses pathetic fallacy in Macbeth when in Act2 when he is talking about the weather and the animas around them, setting a dark and evil mood.
One example of pathetic fallacy in Jekyll and Hyde is the description of London's fog mirroring the sinister and mysterious nature of Mr. Hyde. Another example is the stormy weather that accompanies the murder of Sir Danvers Carew, reflecting the violence of the act. These instances of nature reflecting the emotional turmoil and darkness in the story enhance the overall atmosphere of the novella.