English to Spanish Dictionary personifying

personifying

Personificando
definition
verb
public pageants and dramas in which virtues and vices were personified
represent (a quality or concept) by a figure in human form.
translation of 'personifying'
verb
personificar
example
Many people have understood this to be one person because it was written symbolically by 'personifying' the beast as a ‘he’.
Her long, thick hair, which is rendered with rubbed graphite, expands as it falls like water to the image's edge; she might almost be 'personifying' a natural force.
Humans have been 'personifying' animals long before the Sumerians etched their first goat-headed man.
The character Levi thus 'personifies' the complexity of African diasporan religions in which many facets coexist with one another.
It is true, as others have argued, that Byron 'personifies' the imperial and despotic nature of Russia in his portrait of the queen, but this is only a partial rendering of a significant section of the poem as a whole.
The longer I sat there, the more he seemed to 'personify' all that is wretched in the pharmaceutical industry.
The soul, the mind, moral entities, mental functions, have always, in literature as well as in the arts and folklore, been 'personified' in human or animal form.
The choir likewise represent not only the blessed and angels, but vices 'personified' ; they are also used as a chorus - in the sense of Greek tragedy - to comment on the action.
Like literary writers, nineteenth-century scientists sometimes created characters to embody or 'personify' challenging ideas.
And the young striker was coolness 'personified' as he swivelled and drilled into the bottom corner from 15 yards.
She is and has been a tremendous asset to the organization and exemplary nursing leader who 'personifies' the essence of distinguished service.
These heroes have served culturally and historically to 'personify' and embody Manifest Destiny, the best of America's imaginary frontier in the flesh.
Tan created the characters of Rose, Waverly, June and Lena to 'personify' her own questions and concerns.
Reflecting our multi-faceted natures, each actor broadly 'personifies' an element of her personality.
He 'personified' the pure, blissful soul nature they sought and sensed as the center of themselves.
As a brilliant jockey and then winning trainer here, I think that he 'personifies' the spirit of jump racing.
The chief characters at the centre of the two royal events 'personified' this change of mood.
He was kindness 'personified' in everything he did and he was incapable of uttering an ugly or offensive word.
In many ways it was simply another reflection of the very human tendency to 'personify' the forces of evil.
His characters 'personify' determination and inventiveness.
He 'personifies' superficiality and embodies the fact that they have nothing more to say politically.
Brad was patience 'personified' as he signed hundreds of photographs for adoring fans.
Because prejudice is not 'personified' I believe that it was not to be the object of Jane Austen's sharper criticism.
She makes a crucial change by powerfully anthropomorphizing the scene: she 'personifies' the landscape, and thus it becomes witness to her pain.
Images of Charity 'personified' often show a child suckling at each of her breasts.
In every respect, he was kindness 'personified' and a man of the richest and most sincere nature.
A dream world was born: phantasmagoria, hallucinations, angels in paradise, the sun, moon and stars 'personified' , vividly imagined.
She has chosen to 'personify' this trait in several characters in ‘Pride and Prejudice’ although it is hard to find one character who portrays prejudice alone, throughout the novel.
A discussion of agents would be incomplete if we ignored the human tendency to 'personify' machines.
Boxing champions 'personify' and exemplify every important positive quality that it takes to survive in this world.
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