Personification refers to personification of things and turning things that do not have some human actions and feelings into the same rhetorical devices as people. It should be noted that when figurative words appear in a sentence, they become figurative sentences, not anthropomorphic sentences. In a word, personification is to write with the words of the writer. This technology is also called "personalization". This is a common rhetorical device.
Matters needing attention in anthropomorphic sentences:
1, feelings must conform to the described environment and atmosphere.
Everyone thinks and feels differently about things. For example, the sky you see when you are happy may be blue, while the sky you see when you are sad may be gray. When we use anthropomorphic rhetoric, the emotions we express should also conform to the described environment and atmosphere, and we can't unilaterally pursue rhetoric without paying attention to the overall expression effect.
2. People and things to be compared should have similarities or similarities.
There is no similarity or similarity, and a rigid comparison between "person" and "thing" or "thing" and "person" cannot achieve rhetorical effect. Only when there are similarities or similarities between the two can we write something like a real person.