<span>It means that death is brief and doesn't last long, like a dream or a nap. He says that death will lose the battle because he might die, but he will live eternally, so death lost and it was nothing more than a short sleep that passes away. It ends with him telling to death that death will die and basically that he wins.</span>
No, that is not an onomatopoeia. That's more personification. Onomatopoeias are usually the sound the object makes. For example, "buzz!" is an onomatopoeia of a bee or a bug. You could phrase your sentence like this instead: "Crash!! The meteoroids slammed against the earth's surface." In this sentence, "crash!" would be the onomatopoeia.
Answer:
kya aapako mujhe anuvaad karane kee aavashyakata hai? yadi haan, to yahaan anuvaad hai: Here is an easy way to get rid of clutter you don't need.
Hi just wanted to earn a point thanks