You might even say that Anne serves as an American name for the tempter Mara, personification of desire in the Buddhist cosmology. |
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The goddess Nature is an amoral pagan personification, her laws harsh and ineluctable. |
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But the numero uno Russian entry was Ludmila, who was the personification of consistency. |
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Caldwell, remember, is the human personification of the wise centaur, Chiron. |
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These people have become the epitome and complete personification of Greed and Corruption. |
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She is the archetypal personification of the sonnet claim because she promises Petrarch poetic fame. |
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He is the personification of eclecticism which results in a frustratingly mixed qualitative output. |
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The ultimate personification of God's love was Jesus, and His love was expressed through the action of dying on the cross. |
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They acted as the personification or representatives of the party and the country, which were considered two sides of the same coin. |
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Using the feminine personal pronoun as an indefinite article is as moronic as using the masculine personal pronoun for personification. |
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Even the Sundanese of West Java, who consider themselves Muslims, believe rice is the personification of the rice Goddess Dewi Sri. |
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He coolly leans against a pillar and appears the personification of suave elegance, wearing a modern tuxedo. |
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For them, Star Wars was the ultimate personification of their boyhood dreams and wishes. |
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The thief, by definition a sneak thief, is merely the most common personification of unmanliness. |
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The premeditation before the killing, its viciousness, and its apparent motivelessness mark the serial killer as the personification of evil. |
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She is perhaps held in deepest affection by the war generation, for whom she was the personification of the Blitz spirit. |
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He's giving back big time, and he is a walking personification of the American dream to me. |
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He was the personification of the kind of low cunning to which Nixon himself aspired but could never quite achieve. |
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With its emphasis on personification and topical allusion, allegory has a long association with political discourse. |
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Moreover, there are no examples of collectives being apostrophized with the regularity that this personification receives. |
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She is at once an intellectual giant, the personification of hostile irascibility, and a kind and gentle great-grandmother. |
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Momus, from the Greek word for blame or criticism, was the ancient world's personification of the contrarian spirit. |
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If there is ever a personification of stone-faced fiendishness, it's Lance. |
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The co-owner of this rotisserie is a personification of congenial attentiveness. |
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This supposed personification of an ancient sacred landscape appears as nothing of the sort but rather a generic Old Man River figurehead. |
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Perhaps it's partially the combination of personification and blatant gender stereotypes. |
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He is the personification of material universe in all its various magnificent manifestations. |
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Here a personification of Painting, crowned with the eye of perspective, is shown in profile extending an embrace toward the hands of friendship. |
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His grave monument reportedly featured the personification of Oligarchy setting fire to personified Democracy. |
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Callous hunters are now presented as the personification of moral depravity. |
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The lake is a personification of peace, tranquillity and unfathomable calm. |
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The use of the Greek word mammon, meaning money or wealth, in this context carries a sort of personification. |
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But indeed it is only strictly speaking that something is amiss, only if the allegorical content of each personification must be taken seriously. |
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His public image was the personification of noblesse oblige, a wholesome and vigorous young president with a beautiful wife and young children. |
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In the drawing for the full composition, the personification of architecture holds a model of a structure with Doric columns. |
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In 1968, Ted Nugent was a lightning rod, a personification of transformational freedom. |
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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. |
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In art and literature, in folk tales and mythology, the mother, as the personification of love and compassion, has been glorified and put up on a pedestal. |
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Literary devices such as similes and personification are introduced. |
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Cleopatra had become the personification of vice, flouter of every convention, breacher of every taboo. |
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The Dalek rapidly became, and has remained, the personification for robotic, procedure-obsessed, indefectible managerial monomania. |
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The Attic tradition regarded the Gorgon as a monster produced by Gaea, the personification of Earth, to aid her sons against the gods. |
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This personification is spatial, and by it the community receives an ethical dimension which includes the task of humanizing geographic space. |
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Destruction: The personification of death and destruction, the goddess Kali is depicted garlanded with severed heads. |
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As justly reviled as he is by many, Emwazi is idolised by Isis recruits as the personification of jihadi cool. |
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Drawing from Hitler's surroundings and context, Mr Mailer succeeds in re-humanising a man who has become a personification of evil. |
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Mary is the human personification of the divine Wisdom, of the Light manifested by reflection. |
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Beyond being a personification of charm and beauty, Mitsou is a perfect fit with the very essence of our brand and our values. |
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The skeleton, as the ultimate personification of death, also plays its morbid role in the visual vocabulary of the grotesque. |
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Among the coins shown on our cover is one bearing a representation of the temple of Roma, the personification of the city. |
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The French conception maintained the idea that the state was the legal personification of the nation, of all its citizens. |
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Lech Wa??sa is the most prominent personification of Solidarity and its success. |
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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. |
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Smith doubted that Perchta descended from a pagan goddess, but thought that she was the personification of Epiphany, derived through folk etymology. |
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Blues with a country beat, the fusion of black and white, had found its personification in Elvis. |
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First of all, they abandoned the personification found in the mythologies and theogonies that preceded them, and the anthropomorphism that accompanies this. |
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Loud, overbearing, and unseemly, he is the very personification of the human id in a mock turtleneck and gold chain. |
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Throughout Fault in Our Stars, Gus is the personification of strength and confidence. |
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Greenwald is the personification of the paranoid streak in American politics. |
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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. |
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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. |
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Azazel was the personification of uncleanness, and in later rabbinic writings, was sometimes described as a fallen angel. |
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She became the very personification of the romantic 19th-century babe, her name synonymous with corsets, consumptive pallor, and pre-Raphaelite tresses. |
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A national personification is an anthropomorphism of a nation or its people. |
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The Brit Award statuette given to the winners features Britannia, the female personification of Britain. |
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Even if I wanted to a writer, knowing the difference between personification and pathetic fallacy won't help much. |
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The Sandman tells the tale of the ageless, anthropomorphic personification of Dream that is known by many names, including Morpheus. |
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The monarch is the living embodiment of the Crown and, as such, is regarded as the personification of the state. |
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There was a paradox about the premiere bash: this quintessential example of New York cool began with Heller creating the personification of English frumpiness. |
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The character is almost certainly a mere personification of a supposed migration by a group or groups from Iberia to Ireland. |
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In later mature Taoist tradition, Laozi came to be seen as a personification of the Tao. |
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A diffident, dedicated man, Bradley seemed the personification of rectitude. He never got too big for his britches. |
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The bill is the personification of the commodification of the human being. |
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Some thinkers claimed that myths result from the personification of objects and forces. |
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Britannia is a national personification of the United Kingdom, originating from Roman Britain. |
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Its plot contains several violent murders and includes as one of its characters a personification of Revenge. |
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Besides naming the continent, the Greek mythological figure of Europa has frequently been employed as a personification of Europe. |
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I chose Asia because I consider her to be an icon of all that Italy represents and Stefano Dionisi because he is the personification of the ideal Latin male that I needed for this story. |
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A second, less used, personification of the nation is the character John Bull. |
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Each group naturally finds reasons for its antagonisms, and children are therefore expected to identify themselves with those who set themselves up as the personification par excellence of the good, the just and the true. |
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There's the mammoth shapes and the choosing of the right angle to accent the design of the forms, and then personification of motherhood and care. |
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However, a new-style mayor would seem less suited to this function: he has his own political agenda and is the personification of the executive power. |
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As dialogue is very much a sine qua non for success, I would like to say to you, on behalf of my group, that you represent the personification of dialogue. |
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Helvetia appears as a national personification of the Swiss confederacy in the 17th century with a 1672 play by Johann Caspar Weissenbach. |
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The reader is continually distracted by a tangle of tenses and the personification of inanimate objects with inappropriate use of the possessive case. |
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Her detractors, many of them just as vociferous, see her as the personification of an uncaring new political philosophy known eponymously as Thatcherism. |
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John Bull is a national personification of the United Kingdom in general and England in particular, especially in political cartoons and similar graphic works. |
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The native Russian national personification is Mother Russia. |
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For not only was Yauk a sun-god of the Sabaeans, but Set, under the title of Tebha, graecicized Typhon, was a personification of the destructive energy of the great orb. |
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