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This phrase is an example of alliteration because it contains repeated consonant sounds at the beginning of words (e.g. "s" in Susie, saw, seashells, seashore). Onomatopoeia describes words that imitate natural sounds (e.g. buzz, hiss, clang).
Assonance is the term for the repetition of vowel sounds in nearby words, whereas alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds.
No, that is not correct. Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds in neighboring words.
"I enjoy reading poetry that uses alliteration to create a melodious flow of sounds."
Not really anything, only alliteration is the proper name to call it if you insert it in an essay, playwrite, ect.
alliteration
This phrase is an example of alliteration because it contains repeated consonant sounds at the beginning of words (e.g. "s" in Susie, saw, seashells, seashore). Onomatopoeia describes words that imitate natural sounds (e.g. buzz, hiss, clang).
Yes. Alliteration is having words together with similar sounds, so that can happen at the start, middle or end of a sentence.
No, the repetition of the beginning sounds of words in successive or nearby lines is known as consonance. Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds specifically within a single line of text.
Yes, "Sounds spectacular" is an example of alliteration because the words start with the same sound "s".
The correct spelling is alliteration (using words with similar sounds or spellings).
alliteration is the repetition of consonants sounds
Alliteration is the repeated rendering of similar sounds which sound the same, being the beginnings of the wild and wonderful words we use when practicing the pursuit of poetry. Consonants only, though; repeated vowel sounds are called assonance.
Consonance -- similar consonant sounds -- key could crack crockery
Alliteration
alliteration
Assonance is the term for the repetition of vowel sounds in nearby words, whereas alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds.