Final answer:
An example of personification from Malala Yousafzai's Nobel Peace Prize speech cannot be provided without the text, but the concept involves attributing human qualities to non-human entities. For accurate instances, one should refer directly to the speech.
Step-by-step explanation:
The student has asked for an example of personification in Malala Yousafzai's Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech. While the excerpts provided do not include text from Malala's speech, we can discuss the figurative language of personification as used in literature and speeches. Personification involves giving human characteristics to non-human entities. It is a rhetorical device that authors and speakers use to create imagery or to convey certain sentiments. An example of personification from a different source is found in the phrase, “Noble Peace Prize Acceptance Speech.” However, without a direct quote from Malala's speech, we cannot provide an accurate example from that text. It would be advisable to look up her speech to find an instance where she might have given human traits to abstract ideas or inanimate objects.