Welll......... It means you
a dragon lives in a digy,
A creature alliteration poem is a type of poem where each line features words that start with the same letter or sound. For example, "Slippery snakes slither silently" or "Jumpy jaguars jaunt joyfully."
The alliteration present in the rabbit poem is "busy bunny bouncing."
An alliteration poem can have any number of lines, as long as there is a consistent use of alliteration in each line. Some alliteration poems may have a few lines or several stanzas, depending on the poet's preference and the overall structure of the poem.
An alteration can be done in different formats. The only thing that must be true for it to be an alliteration poem would be for it to have multiple instances where alliteration is used.
yes there is in the part "leaves its high holy temple"
The phrase "We real cool" is an example of alliteration in the poem.
I could not find any obvious alliteration.
a dragon lives in a digy,
A number alliteration is when each line starts with its number and all the words in the line start with same sound (ex line 2: Two Toms tapped there tippity tappity toes)
"She sells seashells by the seashore," is a poem with alliteration. An example of a simile in a poem is "Her hair was as dark as the night." An example of onomatopoeia in a poem is "The bees buzzed as they flew from flower to flower."
Yes, there is alliteration in the poem "Adolescence III" by Rita Dove. An example of alliteration in the poem is in the line "O for a life of Sensations rather than of Thoughts!" where the repeated "s" sound creates an alliteration.