the people is always gossiping with his/her seatmate...
the mosquitoes buzzing are deadly in my ears! not sure!
no
a thick mist is a person
Yes, "raise a mist" is an example of personification because it ascribes human-like qualities (the ability to create a mist) to a non-human entity (something that cannot physically raise a mist).
Odysseus passed the city of the Cimmerians, where the sun never shines.
Mist is a very dense water vapor, almost as thick as fog. ... As a verb, mist means "to cover with mist," so you might mist your dry plants or watch your windows mist up in the rain. Mist can also refer to a general dimness or cloudiness: "She watched through the mist of her tears."
personification allusion paradox alliteration
Mist and fog.
The mist came out of the garden hose, we acted like it was raining.
You could use it like this...... I like to use water vapour. sorry it is not much of a sentence.......
The lovers agreed to make their tryst at dusk by the mist enshrouded lake but the mist was so thick that they both fell into the lake and drown.
It could be a dead metaphor. However, there is another interpretation: It is a personification :the mist as a man and the sun as a woman who is veiled. As the sun is a source of beauty and light, it is like the beautiful woman and the mist here as a jealous man. Notice also the paradox between "the mist" as a symbol of gloom and the sun as a symbol of optimism.
Fog, or if it isn't too thick then you would probably call it mist.
Fog, or if it isn't too thick then you would probably call it mist.