Personification: "the night was calm and still" - giving human qualities to the night by describing it as calm and still. Human trait/quality: Peaceful demeanor, tranquility.
No, the word chirped is the past participle, past tense of the verb to chirp. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective. Examples:verb: We sat quietly while the crickets chirped.adjective: Her chirped greeting made me smile.The noun form is chirp: I heard a chirp coming from the nest.
Well yeah. Male crickets chirp by rubbing their wings together; as for females I'm not quite sure, but they CAN chirp. I have had many many crickets; they all chirped. Im thinking I didn't ALWAYS get males.... ?
The subject is "birds".
The canary chirped a high-pitched song to the other birds that sat on the fence.
"Chirped" can be both a transitive and intransitive verb. As an intransitive verb, it stands alone without requiring an object (e.g., "The birds chirped"). As a transitive verb, it requires an object to complete its meaning (e.g., "The birds chirped a lovely tune").
The exotic birds chirped loudly in the lush tropical rainforest.
Chirped is a verb. It's the past tense of chirp.
Mumbled
chirped
peeped, cheeped, tweeted, twittered
1 syllable
The past historic tense of "chirp" is "chirped".