Oh, what a happy little question! Let's paint some personification sentences with the word "lunge." Imagine a fierce wind lunging at the trees, playfully tousling their leaves. Picture a wave lunging towards the shore, eager to greet the sandy beach with a gentle embrace. See how nature comes alive when we give movement and intention to the world around us.
Yes, the word 'personification' is a noun, a word for the representation of a thing or idea as a person or by the human form; a perfect example; a word for a thing. Example: The character Uncle Sam was the personification of the US in wartime.
Personification is giving an inanimate object human qualities. An onomatopoeia is a word that imitates a sound.
The frog burped after his lunch.
An example of personification: The dog walked away saying, "Farewell feline,'' to the cat. The dog has personification because it is walking and talking; it has human characteristics.
The wind whispered through the trees. The sun smiled down on the children playing. The car grumbled as it struggled up the hill. The flowers danced in the breeze.
The needle collapsed after a long day of work at the clothing factory.
We could see the animal lunge towards the prey.
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There is no such word.
The root word of lunging is "lunge".
The word "personification" is a noun.
The word 'lunged' is the past tense of the verb to lunge (lunges, lunging, lunged), to thrust a sword at something or a sudden leap forward.Example: He lunged at the ball but couldn't grasp it.The word lunge is also a noun (lunge, lunges) a word for an instance of a sudden thrust or leap.
retreat
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'.
Assuming this is a riddle: personification.
'Personification' comes from the word 'personify.''Personify' comes from the French word personnifier and the Italian word personificare.
the story has a narrate