Yes, when you talk about a thing (a tree, the fog, an umbrella) or an abstract concept (love, death, progress) as if it is a person, or when you ascribe personal qualities to it, that is personification. Obviously, the cold refers to a seasonal temperature, and it does not have human emotions like the ability to feel hesitant or reluctant.
This is an example of personification, where the cold is given human-like qualities of reluctance. It helps create a vivid image of the changing weather and sets a mood for the scene.
Personifiction
Personifiction
An example of personification in the short story "The Sniper" is when the sniper's hands are described as "numbed with the cold." This personification gives human qualities to the hands by suggesting that they can feel cold like a person.
A personification of a cold rainy day could be a gloomy figure draped in dark clouds, with rain falling like tears from its eyes and a chill in the air that pierces through to the bones.
Personification. This literary term attributes human characteristics, such as feelings or behaviors, to a non-human entity - in this case, humor is described as cold and drowsy.
Examples of personification in "In Cold Blood" include describing the wind as "howling" or the trees as "whispering." These instances give human-like qualities to non-human elements, creating vivid and emotional imagery in the narrative.
earth is hot and cold
It's possible but cold sores are not as likely to be passed on in between break outs. They could be passed if a break out is just starting or healing over. While there are no signs or symptoms of a cold sore it's not likely to be passed.
It uses personification twice, between Earth, the hills, and the Army soldiers all "stretched out", and the cold, the fog, and the men "stretched out" on the hills "resting". The second (the cold, the fog, stretched out, "resting") brings an image of death, of being "stretched out resting" or "laid out" for a funeral viewing, even if at the time no one was dead yet in the story. Altogether, it brings a feeling of foreboding, of an unfolding of events that cannot be stopped, and that is beyond any one person's power to control the outcome.
Cold in the Earth was created in 1992.
Yes, "a heart of stone" is an example of personification because it attributes human characteristics (having a heart made of stone, which implies being cold, unfeeling, or unemotional) to an inanimate object.