Definitely personification.
Personification is giving non-living things living characteristics. e.g. sun slumbers.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
the vowel that joins a root to another root or to a suffix
Explanation:
My/o as in Myology employs a combining vowel, in this case, the 'o', which serves as a merger for two root words or a root word and a suffix. Known to have no distinct meaning, this vowel eases the pronunciation of certain medical terms that are otherwise difficult to pronounce.
Another example is cardiology, which is the study of the heart and diseases associated with it. Cardia is a root word in Greek which means 'heart', and logy is another root wordy in Greek which refers to the 'study of'. It is widely used for this purpose and is seconded by the combining vowel 'a'.
1. The dogs in my neighbour’s yard started barking.
2. The teacher asked the students in the back row of the classroom to please be quiet.
“ministers in court dress, army and navy officers in full uniform, nine hundred students, and an audience of two thousand ticket holders,”
I hope that helps. I don't know the answer to your question so I searched it up. I know that's NOT what Brainly is for, and I'm sorry. But you posted your question like 10 minutes ago, so I did what I can.
JSU’s is SJSU’s he nakzishs.