assonance
Assonance is a vowel sound that is repeated internally in words in a phrase.
The repeated vowel sound within words in a phrase is called "assonance." It is a literary device that involves the repetition of similar vowel sounds to create a musical or rhythmic effect in the text.
The words "bee," "bet," and "bay" can be visualized as a triangle on a vowel chart, with "bee" at the top, "bet" and "bay" forming the bottom corners.
The repetition of vowel sounds is known as assonance. If consonants are repeated, this is known as alliteration.
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.
Assonance is the literary term for words that have the same vowel sound and thereby have a sometimes imperfect rhyme. An example might be the words steep and heat. Both words have the same "E" sound as the vowel and can be poetically connected because of that fact. Assonance can also be applied in instances when consonants are similar but the vowels are not identical in sound. An example of that might be the use of an "M" to pull words together poetically. Think a "hymn" in his "name." The consonants are not the same so it really doesn't rhyme, but you can see the relation and in a song this sort of relation works.
what words have the same vowel sound as bin
The phrase "A host of golden daffodils" has assonance from the repeated "o" sound. This is the repetition of a vowel sound within words for poetic effect. It is a form of internal rhyme that does not require similar consonants around the vowel sounds, so the repetition can be used in a subtle way.
Diesel does have a long "E" sound, so yes. Generally in long vowel words with two vowels together, the long vowel sound represents the first letter of the vowel pair, not the second, for example "died," where the long vowel sound is "I" So "diesel" is unusual, since the long vowel sound represents the second vowel "E"
Sometimes children have trouble distingishing if it's the short or long vowel sound in a word. Also, sometimes the words have marks above them. This tells if it's a short or long sound. If you don't know what these mean you can also sound out the word. As an example in "cat" the 'a' sounds shorter. This is a classic example for a short vowel sound.As another example, the 'o' in "foam" is a long vowel sound.
Short vowel sound. Words such as ice and item are long I vowel sounds.
The Y in fly has a long I vowel sound, as do the words sly and my.