The television shot noise at me
Yes, because a verb is an action, something that you do, where as an adjective describes something and a noun is an object. So in the sentence "I attentively watch the TV", 'attentively' is the adjective (describing how you watch the TV), 'TV' is the noun (the only object in the sentence), and 'watch' is the verb (because this is what you're doing, watching the TV). so yes; watch is a verb.
TV is really good for you, it lets you learn lots of stuff and see other people naked.
TV Tango is a good site to find past TV schedules. Also TV.com and TV listings.aol are good sites for past TV schedules.
good channel
i tried to cut an apple
The wind danced through the trees, whispering secrets as it passed by.
A sentence using personification is "the wind gently brushed the hair away from my face."
The television shot noise at me
Noun. A+
"It was as loud as a lion." Or something else.
He was the very personification of the boy in the book called Where The Wild Things Are. That is a good example because the word means to act or show characteristics of something nonhuman.
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Yes, in "Matilda" by Roald Dahl, there is an example of personification in the phrase "The television was whispering away to itself in the corner." Personification is used here to give human-like qualities to the television as if it were whispering like a person.
a sentence that takes the place of a human act
Some TV commercials are so loud and obnoxious that they assault your senses.
Yes, the sentence "leaves danced in the breeze" is an example of personification because leaves cannot actually dance like humans do. Personification is when human characteristics are given to non-human things.