Yes, there are instances of personification in the novel "Unwind" by Neal Shusterman. For example, the Harvest Camps are described as "gobbling up" teens, giving them a sense of being alive and active. Additionally, the phrase "The moment he steps into the wood, he's embraced by its familiar, living presence" personifies the woods as embracing and alive.
There's Unwind Role Play, a wetpaint site, it's new, and needs more members.
Unwind.
Yes in the book unwind
The opposite of rewind is unwind.
Its as flexible as any standard cat5e but will require being stretched out to start to unwind and reshape from coiled to straight.
no
yes
Unwound is the past participle of unwind.
Unwind - novel - was created in 2007.
Unwind was created on 2001-03-06.
No, the word unwind is a verb, a word for an action (unwind, unwinds, unwinding, unwound). Example sentence: When I try to unwind the ribbon from the spool, I end up with a tangled mess.
Yes, the word unwind is a verb, a word for an action (unwind, unwinds, unwinding, unwound). Example sentence: When I try to unwind the ribbon from the spool, I end up with a tangled mess.