simile
personification
Simile because it uses the word "like".
simile (:
simile
Sounds like irony to me...
Act 4 Scene 5 line 28
Capulet at the fake death of Juliet. "Death lies on her like an untimely frost, upon the sweetest flower of all the field.
It means that it is ironic that death or frost has fallen on the most beautiful flower and not on some common or hasty flower hence is like Juliet as she has taken the potion, which is thought to make her dead and is like death falling onto the most prosperous young female.
Capulet says this about his daughter Juliet. "Death lies on her like an untimely frost upon the sweetest flower of all the field." This is in Act IV Scene 5 of the play, when Juliet is discovered, apparently (but unknown to her father, not really) dead on the morning of her wedding day.
The literary term illustrated in the stanza "in azure and gold" is imagery. This term refers to the use of descriptive language that appeals to the senses, helping the reader create a mental image of the scene being described. In this case, the use of words like "azure" and "gold" evoke vivid visual colors and enable the reader to imagine the setting being portrayed.
the ford theathere
Frost Like Ashes was created in 2001.
a swimmie was illustrated like a mini tube and and sorta looked like a bagle but the whole in the middle was bigger.
Death lies on her LIKE an untimely frost It means that it is ironic that death or frost has fallen on the most beautiful flower and not on some common or hasty flower hence is like Juliet as she has taken the potion, which is thought to make her dead and is like death falling onto the most prosperous young female
Lord Capulet uses personification in the quotation "Death lies on her like an untimely frost upon the sweetest flower of all the field" to describe his daughter Juliet. Personification is the attribution of human characteristics to non-human things, in this case, death is being described as lying on Juliet like frost on a flower. This metaphor emphasizes the sudden and unexpected nature of Juliet's death, highlighting the tragedy of the situation.
One simile in Act 4 of Romeo and Juliet is when Juliet compares herself to "a bark on the sea" being tossed and turned by her emotions. This simile highlights Juliet's feelings of helplessness and instability in the face of her circumstances.
Yes, the poem "A Minor Bird of Frost" contains alliteration in phrases like "frosty fields" and "bitter bark." Alliteration is a literary device where words in close proximity start with the same consonant sound, creating a pleasing rhythmic effect.