Answer:
- Personification
- Apostrophe
- Personification
Explanation:
In the first section, we can see that sleep was portrayed as something that was being murdered. Sleep is inanimate, it has no life and therefore cannot be killed, which is a condition that only happens to living beings. When this happens, we claim that the personification is being used.
In the second section we see that Lady Macbeth sees something that does not exist and speaks of something that is not there, as if she were. This is an example of an apostrophe, which is the figure of speech used when a speaker refers directly to something that does not exist or to someone who is dead as if he were alive.
In the third excerpt we see again the use of personification through the reference to the newborn baby who is without any clothes, completely naked.