alliteration if you're saying what i think you're saying
The repetition of the phrase "would have to"
It is not actually a part of speech. The term "part of speech" refers to a single word. For example, "hills" is a noun, and "are" is a verb."The hills are alive with the sound of music" is a complete sentence.A phrase is a group of words that make sense as a group but have no verb; an example is "with the sound of music".
The prepositional phrase in this sentence is "across Puget Sound."
Assonance is a vowel sound that is repeated internally in words in a phrase.
Almost there
No, it is not a conjunction, but it could be a contraction of the phrase "sound is" (the sound's coming from in back). It can also be the possessive form of the noun sound (the sound's tone changed).
The Cambridge Sound group offers professional sound equipment as well as live sound and professional DJ Services that you may hire off of their website.
The group of lines in this excerpt that illustrates the music of autumn is: "And often like a scythe the grain-hook keen; Or on a half-reap'd furrow sound asleep/Drows'd with the fume of poppies." These lines evoke the gentle, rhythmic sounds of the autumn harvest, with the imagery of the grain-hook slicing through the crops and the drowsy, dreamlike quality of the poppies.
The children were found safe and sound inside the house.
Somewhere along the lines of "ROAR!"
The phrase "dear gentlemen" is grammatically correct, but it may sound a bit formal and old-fashioned. It is more common to address a group of people as "gentlemen" or "dear friends" instead.
The phrase qualitative change refers to the change of a sound. It can also refer to what the basic nature of a sound is.