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"My life is a dream" is an example of personification, not alliteration. Personification is giving human characteristics to non-human things, while alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds in neighboring words.
Onomatopoeia
The feeling of something is not specifically personification, alliteration, or onomatopoeia. Personification gives human characteristics to non-human things, alliteration is the repetition of the same consonant sound, and onomatopoeia imitates sounds. The feeling of something is more related to emotions or sensations.
Sunlight smiles in the sky (also alliteration :])
The phrase "gazing grain" contains alliteration and personification. It is an example of alliteration because of the repetition of the "g" sound, and personification because it gives human characteristics (gazing) to the grain.
The phase "winds blow" is a personification because it attributes human-like qualities (the ability to blow) to the winds. It is not alliteration, hyperbole, or a metaphor.
Alliteration and personification
Simile: comparing two things using "like" or "as", e.g., "as brave as a lion." Metaphor: describing one thing as if it were another, e.g., "time is a thief." Personification: giving human characteristics to non-human things, e.g., "the wind whispered through the trees." Hyperbole: exaggerating to make a point, e.g., "I've told you a million times." Alliteration: the repetition of initial consonant sounds, e.g., "she sells seashells by the seashore."
personification, enjambment, use of grammer (such as commas), rhyming structure, assonance, alliteration.
alliteration,personification metaphor and similie
personification
Alliteration, personification, irony, metaphor, onomatopoeia etc...