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"Two households . . . break to new mutiny". It's not the households but the people who live there who do the breaking--the households are treated as people.

"Whose misadventured piteous o'erthrows . . . bury their parents' strife." It's tough to tell, but the noun in this sentence is I believe "o'erthrows", meaning reversals of fortune, which of course cannot perform the act of burying anything.

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Q: What are examples of personification in the prologue of romeo and Juliet?
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