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31 August, 16:34

What is it called when a poet directly addresses a person or thing that cannot respond?

A.

personification

B.

metaphor

C.

apostrophe

D.

assonance

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Answers (2)
  1. 31 August, 16:50
    0
    The correct answer is C. apostrophe.

    Apostrophe is a figure of speech in which an author (usually a poet, but sometimes a writer as well), refers to someone who is not present, and talks to them, invokes them, but they cannot respond (as they are not there).

    Personification is when non-human entities/objects have human characteristics; metaphor is a symbolical comparison; assonance is when vowels in neighboring words are repeated.
  2. 31 August, 18:18
    0
    A. personification

    personification is giving a human characteristic to a nonhuman object
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