Personification.
i think its personification
hyperbole
simile and METAPHOR AND PERSONIFICATION AND CHEESE
The phase "winds blow" is a personification because it attributes human-like qualities (the ability to blow) to the winds. It is not alliteration, hyperbole, or a metaphor.
repition ryhme metaphor simile hyperbole personification
It is a metaphor because it's comparing bear and death without using "like" or "as".
simile,metaphor,personification,hyperbole,alliteration and irony
Simile: comparing two unlike things using "like" or "as" (e.g. "as brave as a lion"). Metaphor: direct comparison between two unlike things (e.g. "time is a thief"). Personification: giving human qualities to something non-human (e.g. "the sun smiled down on us"). Hyperbole: exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally (e.g. "I've told you a million times"). Alliteration: repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words (e.g. "peter piper picked a peck of pickled peppers"). Onomatopoeia: words that imitate sounds (e.g. "buzz," "crash"). Oxymoron: putting two contradictory words together (e.g. "bittersweet," "deafening silence"). Irony: words used to convey a meaning that is opposite of the literal meaning (e.g. a fire station burning down).
hyperbole, metaphor, onomatopoeia, alliteration, simile and personification.
simile metaphor hyperbole personification oxymoron irony
it is a simile because it it using the word 'like'
The five parts of figurative language are simile, metaphor, personification, hyperbole, and symbolism. Simile compares two things using "like" or "as," while metaphor directly states that one thing is another. Personification gives human characteristics to non-human things, hyperbole exaggerates for emphasis, and symbolism uses objects or ideas to represent something else.