Alliteration is the use of the same letter to begin words in a phrase (beautiful bright bananas)
Check it out here:
http://englishpatterns.com/community/viewtopic.php?t=12
If you see any missing, feel free to post.
A: An ape ate an avocado.
B: Baby bananas beat buckwheat bread.
C: Can candles chuck computers?
D: Dogs dig dumb ditches.
E: Epic Elephants eat edible eggs.
F: Fishy flounders fly fast.
G: Groups greet game groups.
H: Happy hippos hassle happily.
I: Itches irritate ill iguanas.
J: Job jogged jingly.
K: Kill known knobs.
L: Lovely lizards live lazily.
M: Mary mumbled many metaphors.
N: Natalie nibbled nine nuggets.
O: Octopus own one oyster.
P: Pat picked pickled pies.
Q: Quinn quit quizzes.
R: Rats rapped rapidly.
S: Sheila's sons sung solo.
T: This thick thimble thought tightly.
U: Unused urchins unhurt.
V: Veal Vibe.
W: When wheels whip, water whirls.
X: Xavier played Xenia's Xylophone.
Y: Yachts yap "Yum!"
Z: Zoos zap Zebras.
An amazing alligator ate an apple. Betty baked blueberry bread. Carl caught a cold camping. Danny danced daily.
Mom munched marmalade sandwich.
alliteration is figurative language
Connecicut alliterations
donkey
forty
They are in chronological order.
what are all the moshlinngs in alphebetical order
biography of Eric korngold
alliterations
Follow the link to Wikipedia - Scroll down the web-page and there is a colour map detailing the areas Canada is split into.
Kulas, John Kulas, Johnathan Kulik, John Kullas, Jonathan
"Psychosocial" and "Wait and Bleed" by Slipknot are examples of songs that contain alliterations.
In "The Lady, or the Tiger?" by Frank R. Stockton, there are a few alliterations such as "savage strength" and "guilty gaze." These alliterations help create a sense of rhythm and emphasis in the story.
no
Normally lists of names are in alphabetical order according to their surname. But there is nothing to stop you putting the list in order according to first names, especially if it is a list of friends or people that everyone knows.
sun smells