Oh, dude, like, sure. So, like, pickles are basically the rockstars of the condiment world. I mean, they're all crunchy and tangy, like they're throwing a party in your mouth. So, you could say, "The pickles danced gleefully in the sandwich, adding a zesty kick to the party." Like, totally personified, man.
Each blade of grass danced and swayed in the breeze.
The radiator smiled a pearly while smile from its reflector.
Personification is when you give nonliving things living characteristics. So the answer is, china doesn't dance because the China is not alive
Th eagles in the 3D movie seemed like they were going to bump in to me.
Only a sentence can be said to have sentence structure, and the word innumerable is not a sentence, unless we imagine that it is the reply to the question "how many pickles have you eaten?" In that case, the terse reply "innumerable" is understood to mean, I have eaten innumerable pickles. This is a simple sentence, with I as the subject, have eaten as the verb, pickles as the object, and innumerable as an adjective modifying pickles.
A sentence using personification is "the wind gently brushed the hair away from my face."
Noun. A+
The pickup truck roared at us because we were in the way when it was trying to backup.
Hsbsbshahhajaa
The palace stood arrogantly, its grand marble pillars sneering down at the humble village below.
a sentence that takes the place of a human act
Yes, the sentence "leaves danced in the breeze" is an example of personification because leaves cannot actually dance like humans do. Personification is when human characteristics are given to non-human things.