Phoenix three nodded and took the next sentence.

Lion rolling hydrangea.

Phoenix three nods is a rhetorical device of personification sentence.

An anthropomorphic sentence is to compare something with a person, not to be confused with fairy tales. Fairy tales are imagination (for example, Ye Jie said "Grandpa Sun ……" This is not an anthropomorphic sentence). According to imagination, things are described or described as people, so that "things" have the same words, deeds, thoughts and feelings as people.

Matters needing attention in anthropomorphic sentences:

1, feelings must conform to the described environment and atmosphere.

Everyone thinks and feels differently about things. For example, the sky you see when you are happy may be blue, while the sky you see when you are sad may be gray. When we use anthropomorphic rhetoric, the emotions we express should also conform to the described environment and atmosphere, and we can't unilaterally pursue rhetoric without paying attention to the overall expression effect.

2. People and things to be compared should have similarities or similarities.

There is no similarity or similarity, and a rigid comparison between "person" and "thing" or "thing" and "person" cannot achieve rhetorical effect. Only when there are similarities or similarities between the two can we write something like a real person.