Alright so there is "the clouds are mean" obviously the clouds cannot really be mean they just look mean. There is also "a narrow wind complains all day" the wind is really just whistling like wind does, but the poet describes it as complaining to help set the mood of the poem.
In "The Sky is Low," Emily Dickinson personifies nature by describing the sky as bending down to touch the earth. This personification gives the impression that the sky is actively participating in the scene.
The bench moaned when i sat on it
.Well no. Personification is when you give something not alive human characteristics .For example: The couch laughed at the joke told. A cricket is alive. It is not personification.
the is beautifyul
the cat whispered as it walked around my head.
the snapler snapped like a crocodile
personification is when you give an inanimate object human like qualities. example the sun says help to me every morning
Yes, "the sky is low" is an example of personification, as it gives human characteristics (being low) to the sky.
Personification is when you give human characteristics to an animal, place, or object. For example the sun smiled, or the stag wept.
Yes, in "Matilda" by Roald Dahl, there is an example of personification in the phrase "The television was whispering away to itself in the corner." Personification is used here to give human-like qualities to the television as if it were whispering like a person.
The tree's branches swayed in the wind like a ballet dancer.
My face is telling me this makeup remover is terrible
No you can only give personification to something that's not alive.