no. an onomatopoeia is the use of words to imitate sounds, and I'm not a genius, but i don't think "am equals" is one.:)I may be wrong.
onomatopia
Onomatopeia, like all poetic devises, is simply a way to make language sound more pleasing to the ear.
yes of curse
As a heavy breath. grunt or sigh - it is.
Ex. pop! could be for popcorn
This is an example of personification, where the dried berries are described as inflicting a harsh assault, attributing human qualities to them.
5 examples of onomatopoeia are splash, growl, bang, fwoosh, and buzz.
"The crowd's murmur rose to a buzz when they heard the boom." Bolded words are examples of onomatopoeia
They use rhyme, metaphors, similies, onomatopia, repatition and assonance
An example of an onomatopoiea is: The waves crashed and smashed against the sea defence, OR The trees rustledin the wind, OR The sausages hissed and spat in the frying pan.
no. onomatopia is something like Crunch! or Swoosh! though it probably devoloped into the English language because it sounded like what people were trying to explain. :)
The Bells, by E.A. Poe, for one. Also, Jabberwocky and the Highwayman, but the Bells is better.