-
A. Personification
-
B. Alliteration
-
C. Metaphor
-
D. None of these
Explanation
Personification gives human characteristics to non-human things.
In the line "And the garden is changing its clothes," the garden is described as if it can change clothes, which is a human action.
This gives the garden a human quality, making it an example of personification.
-
A. None of these
-
B. Alliteration
-
C. Hyperboles
-
D. Onomatopoeia
Explanation
- Onomatopoeia refers to words that imitate natural sounds, like buzz, hiss, roar, and splash.
- These words mimic the actual sounds they represent in real life.
-
A. Repetition
-
B. Personification
-
C. Metaphor
-
D. Simile
Explanation
The phrase “life is a broken-winged bird” directly compares life to a bird without using “like” or “as.”
This is a metaphor, where one thing is said to be another to show similarity.
-
A. Alliteration
-
B. Metaphor
-
C. Simile
-
D. Personification
Explanation
"You are my sunshine" compares a person to sunshine, implying warmth and happiness without using "like" or "as."
This is a metaphor, as it directly equates the person to sunshine.
-
A. If the sentence contains Onomatopoeia
-
B. None of these
-
C. If the sentence contains Meiosis
-
D. If the sentence contains innuendo
Explanation
- Onomatopoeia refers to words that imitate natural sounds.
- "Murmuring" and "whisper" both mimic soft, hushed sounds, making this an example of onomatopoeia.
-
A. Lyric
-
B. None of these
-
C. Elegy
-
D. Ode
Explanation
- Lycidas (1637) by John Milton is an elegy, mourning the death of his friend Edward King.
- It follows the pastoral elegy tradition, blending grief with reflections on fate, religion, and poetry.
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0