No. Personification is a noun. The adjective form, where usable, is personified, the past participle of the verb to personify.
Usually an adjective or a functional adjective such as a participle, but sometimes the preposition "like", the conjunction "as if", the infinitive "to be", or a noun, as in "He seems the personification of cowardice". This last example has a faint whiff of obsolescence, because most persons now would instead say, "He seems to be the personification of cowardice".
"A heart of stone" is a personification.
The word personification includes the suffix -tion, which makes it into a noun.
personification
personification was the only choice. But no one was ready.
The word personification is a noun, a word for a person. An adjective is a describing word; you would describe the noun personification with an adjective. An example is 'a perfectpersonification'.
There can't be one. Personification is giving human-like qualities to non-human and non-living objects. The word hear is an adjective, not any type of object.
No, saying "the house is quiet" is not an example of personification. Personification is when human characteristics are attributed to non-human things. In this case, describing a house as quiet is simply using an adjective to describe its lack of noise.
Usually an adjective or a functional adjective such as a participle, but sometimes the preposition "like", the conjunction "as if", the infinitive "to be", or a noun, as in "He seems the personification of cowardice". This last example has a faint whiff of obsolescence, because most persons now would instead say, "He seems to be the personification of cowardice".
Personification
It is personification without meaning to use personification
There is no personification going on here.
No, personification does not have a prefix
personification
personification
The word "personification" is a noun.
Personification