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comic relief- Act 1; Scene 1; Line 15 "a mender of bad souls" double entendre-Act 2; Scene 1; line 69 metaphor- Act 1; Scene 2; Lines 68-69 "i, your glass" onomatopoeia- Act 2; Scene 1; Line 44 personification- Act 1; Scene 1; Line 46
Ate- Greek goddess of revengeAntony mentions it in his soliloquy in Julius Caesar (Act 3 Scene 1)
scene 1 act 3
To answer your question accurately, I would need the specific sentence from The Declaration of Independence that you're referring to. However, in general, personification occurs when human qualities are attributed to non-human entities or abstract concepts. If a sentence describes a concept like liberty or justice as if it could act or feel, it exemplifies personification by giving that concept life-like characteristics.
"Oh, you Hard Hearts" Act 1; Scene 1; Line 35 "Give him Some Soil" Act 1; Scene 2; Line 45 Alliterations are the repetitions of initial sounds
Act 2 scene 2 lines 44-45. "Danger knows full well that Caesar is more dangerous than he."
act 3 scene 2 line 45
He was the very personification of the boy in the book called Where The Wild Things Are. That is a good example because the word means to act or show characteristics of something nonhuman.
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Mercutio says it about half way through Act 2 Scene 4.
comic relief- Act 1; Scene 1; Line 15 "a mender of bad souls" double entendre-Act 2; Scene 1; line 69 metaphor- Act 1; Scene 2; Lines 68-69 "i, your glass" onomatopoeia- Act 2; Scene 1; Line 44 personification- Act 1; Scene 1; Line 46
An act is bacialy a scene in a play, movie, or a mood of a character. 8)
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1)Act IV Scene V 35-36Capulet:O son, the night before thy wedding dayHath Death lain with thy wife.2)Act IV Scene V 48Lady Capulet:And cruel Death hath catched it from my sight.
Ate- Greek goddess of revengeAntony mentions it in his soliloquy in Julius Caesar (Act 3 Scene 1)
He was the very personification of the boy in the book called Where The Wild Things Are. That is a good example because the word means to act or show characteristics of something nonhuman.
"will you pluck my sword out of its pilcher by the ears?" -Mercutio (III, i) "And death, not Romeo take my maidenhead!" - Juliet (Act 3, Scene 2)