Angrily that’s the answer I got
Answer:
It is indeed hyperbole and not personification. <u>this is because the poet is asking Time to take away all his woes and laying the weight of wings of kindness on it.</u>
Explanation:
<u>Hyperbole is when a simple act is laden with something blown out of proportion</u>. here, the simple passage of time is said by the poet to be responsible for taking away his problems through its kindness, when the time is passing irrespective of his woes and does nothing else but pass.
it would have been personification if the winged feet of time in the quotation given, did not speed because of kindness. <u>the human qualities are laid on time by the poet and are not presented as a foregone conclusio</u>n. hence, it is more accurate to see this as hyperbole.
The participle or participial phrase in each sentence is " Being a "and "tried out".
<h3>What is participial phrase?</h3>
Participle phrases are composed of a participle, a modifier, and a pronoun or a noun phrase. The Pronoun/Noun in the phrase will take on the role of the action's recipient. A comma is required after a participial phrase if it comes at the start of a sentence and the next phrase is a full sentence.
A phrase beginning with a participle will be a present or past participle. The sentence will invariably conclude in ing if the participle is present. Similar to how a regular past participle will end in a regular ed. Unfortunately, irregular past participles can end in a variety of different ways.
A present participle phrase is a sentence fragment that modifies a noun and starts with a present participle.
To learn more about participial phrase from the given link:
brainly.com/question/17010891
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Recall the compound angle formulae:
sin(A+B) = sinAcosB + cosAsinB
cos(A+B) = cosAcosB - sinAsinB
sin(A+B) + cos(A+B) = sinAcosB + cosAsinB + cosAcosB - sinAsinB
I think?? It looks a little too complicated to be the answer though
(Btw this is Math haha why is this question under English)