Personification,
Metaphor.
Comparison is to describe and illustrate one thing as another. Comparable figures of speech compare people with crops, things with people, or materialize A into B. The use of such figures of speech can achieve unique rhetorical effects: or add unique flavor, or write things vividly to express love and hate. Poetry, novels, essays, fables, fairy tales and so on often use comparable figures of speech.
Metaphor is a common rhetorical device. It is a rhetorical device to describe or explain things A with things B similar to things A. It is also called "metaphor" and "analogy", which was called "bi" or "bi" in ancient China. Jonathan kalle, a famous literary theorist, defines metaphor as a basic cognitive way, which is realized by treating one thing as another. That is to say, finding the * * * similarity between things A and B, we find that things A contain unknown characteristics in things B, and we have a new understanding of things A that is different from usual. Metaphor can be divided into simile (direct metaphor), metaphor (metaphor), generic metaphor, metonymy, duality, metaphor, simple metaphor, detail metaphor, quoted metaphor and empty metaphor according to the way of description or explanation.
Anthropomorphic sentences compare something with someone's actions, not like fairy tales. What is written must have human characteristics; No figurative words can appear; Words representing characters cannot appear.