English, asked by nadeennour2018, 3 months ago

blow blow by William Shakespeare figures of speech​

Answers

Answered by chris172317
2

Answer:

“Blow, Blow, Thou Winter Wind” is a poem from the Shakespeare play As You Like It. This poem is an example of a type of figurative language called personification. When writers personify, they give human characteristics to their subject

Answered by sahildudhal
2

Answer:

Shakespeare employs apostrophe in this poem. Apostrophe is when the speaker addresses someone or something that cannot respond. In this case, the speaker directly addresses the winter wind in the first few lines, creating apostrophe.

Wind does not actually possess a "tooth" or "breath," but this personification draws attention to how much the wind's figurative bite can sting our skin and wound us. Comparing the wind's blowing to breath and calling it "rude" also draws our attention to its harshness and the negative impact it can have on us. In personifying the wind, the speaker makes its features seem much more personal; however, even still, a false friend is much worse.

The speaker employs apostrophe again when he or she directly addresses the "bitter sky" in the second stanza. He also says that the "bite" of the frozen sky isn't as painful as the "sting" of not being remembered as a friend. He compares a physical pain to an emotional one via a simile: "Thy sting is not so sharp / As friend remembered not." A simile is a comparison of two unalike things using like or as.

Explanation:

The poem "Blow, Blow, Thou Winter Wind" is from Shakespeare's play As You Like It. It exemplifies personification in giving human characteristics to a nonhuman subject. It is also an example of apostrophe, in which a speaker addresses a person or thing that can't respond.

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