English to Malay Dictionary personification

personification

perwujudan
definition
noun
In those cultures, many scholars and many books would say the same: All these gods are then personification of some nature or phenomenon.
the attribution of a personal nature or human characteristics to something nonhuman, or the representation of an abstract quality in human form.
example
he was the very 'personification' of British pluck and diplomacy
You might even say that Anne serves as an American name for the tempter Mara, 'personification' of desire in the Buddhist cosmology.
The function of this process of 'personification' is that it permits nature to be thought of as if it were a society of persons, and so makes of it a social or moral order.
Twain rarely uses 'personification' in this work.
Eros is a term insufficiently abstract; Eros is a god, Aphrodite a 'personification' .
Evil, mysterious, hostile to health and goodness, demons were once viewed as inferior gods-the 'personification' of the powers behind human sickness, idolatry, and heresy.
In fact, this motif has been interpreted as a 'personification' of Bounty or Charity, a symbol of Ecclesia, or simply as a poor Dutch woman who seeks shelter for herself and her children in the church.
In Matthew, Jesus is the fulfillment and 'personification' of Torah, the fully ‘faithful Child whom God had desired in Israel.’
She looked the 'personification' of pre-adolescent sulkiness, which perhaps explains the star quality she has for girls aged seven to 10.
The ultimate 'personification' of God's love was Jesus, and His love was expressed through the action of dying on the cross.
However, he reflected deeply on the existence of this inner woman who possessed the power to upset him, and concluded that she must be the 'personification' of his soul.
Music is simply an 'personification' of the soul.
he was the very 'personification' of British pluck and diplomacy
The lake is a 'personification' of peace, tranquillity and unfathomable calm.
But indeed it is only strictly speaking that something is amiss, only if the allegorical content of each 'personification' must be taken seriously.
His grave monument reportedly featured the 'personification' of Oligarchy setting fire to personified Democracy.
In the drawing for the full composition, the 'personification' of architecture holds a model of a structure with Doric columns.
This supposed 'personification' of an ancient sacred landscape appears as nothing of the sort but rather a generic Old Man River figurehead.
To stress apostrophe, 'personification' , prosopopoeia, and hyperbole is to join the theorists who through the ages have emphasized what distinguishes the lyric from other speech acts, what makes it the most literary of forms.
the design on the franc shows Marianne, the 'personification' of the French republic
He is the 'personification' of eclecticism which results in a frustratingly mixed qualitative output.
The use of the Greek word mammon, meaning money or wealth, in this context carries a sort of 'personification' .
That's all this 'personification' of modesty has to say.
These people have become the epitome and complete 'personification' of Greed and Corruption.
She is the archetypal 'personification' of the sonnet claim because she promises Petrarch poetic fame.
His public image was the 'personification' of noblesse oblige, a wholesome and vigorous young president with a beautiful wife and young children.
His initial poems lean heavily on outmoded styles and subjects, such as Norse 'personification' , sailors of Devon, or the bird as a correlative for soaring aspiration.
The goddess Nature is an amoral pagan 'personification' , her laws harsh and ineluctable.
With its emphasis on 'personification' and topical allusion, allegory has a long association with political discourse.
Not only did Cameron produce numerous portraits of Jackson as herself, but also as a poetic ‘Stella’ and a 'personification' of ‘Beauty.’
Credits: Google Translate
Download the
HelloEnglishApp
image_one