Antonyms for personify
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : per-son-uh-fahy |
Phonetic Transcription : pərˈsɒn əˌfaɪ |
Definition of personify
Origin :- 1727 "to attribute personal form to things or abstractions" (especially as an artistic or literary technique), from person + -fy or from French personnifier (17c.), from personne. Meaning "to represent, embody" attested from 1806. Related: Personified; personifying.
- verb represent some other being, character
- Like mythology, Greek philosophy has a tendency to personify ideas.
- Extract from : « Sophist » by Plato
- This is only a convenience, because it seems necessary to personify.
- Extract from : « The Book of the Damned » by Charles Fort
- That man has a strong motive for my death, and to personify me afterwards.
- Extract from : « Rattlin the Reefer » by Edward Howard
- Now it is often convenient to personify Nature, but we must not be misled.
- Extract from : « Parenthood and Race Culture » by Caleb Williams Saleeby
- It is natural for us to personify and envelop in mystery the things that we do not understand.
- Extract from : « Plain English » by Marian Wharton
- There is in the human mind a tendency to personify abstractions.
- Extract from : « On the Phenomena of Hybridity in the Genus Homo » by Paul Broca
- His whole soul was absorbed in these adventures, and he appeared to personify the traveller.
- Extract from : « Byron » by Richard Edgcumbe
- A fugitive slave may be said to personify "life, liberty, and happiness."
- Extract from : « The Luck of Roaring Camp and Other Tales » by Bret Harte
- It will be noticed that unless a force intrudes itself on him he does not personify it.
- Extract from : « The Hearts of Men » by H. Fielding
- There is innate in all men a tendency to personify the forces they cannot understand.
- Extract from : « The Hearts of Men » by H. Fielding
Synonyms for personify
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019