Cause I make it rain on them hoes.
to flavore food
the alveoli
they eat human skin, and little bit of leaves
A human CAN eat anything (but hair) if they wanted to so yes, a human can eat oak leaves.
No, the description "the leaves were red, yellow, and orange" is not an example of personification. Personification involves giving human qualities or characteristics to non-human things or objects. In this case, the colors of the leaves are simply being described.
Yes, the sentence "leaves danced in the breeze" is an example of personification because leaves cannot actually dance like humans do. Personification is when human characteristics are given to non-human things.
No there is no such part. Human are not photosynthetic
insects
they eat human skin, and little bit of leaves
they eat human flesh
For an average adult human, 5 percent of the blood supply enters or leaves the heart with each heartbeat.
"The leaves danced in the wind" is an example of personification. Personification is when you apply human characteristics to nonhuman subjects, such as leaves dancing. To make this a simile, try something like this; "The leaves danced in the wind like..."