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Alliterative means that the phrase has words that sound the same at the beginning, so "iguana ices" has the i at the beginning of each word. Not sure what an iguana ice is, but it is alliterative just because of the letters.
Freida failed. Jessica jogged. Sarah swam. Wendy wrote. Midori made. Grace grew. Time ticks. these are examples of 2-word alliterave phrases. A 2-word alliterative phrase is a phrase in which the 2 word components start with the same beginning sound.
"Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers." It's where the phrase or sentence has a lot of words with the same kind of sound in it.
"How now brown cow" is an alliterative device to help a student learn to pronounce words properly. It is one of many.
An example of alliteration in "Through the Looking-Glass" by Lewis Carroll is the phrase "ravages of rippling roundness" in Chapter 7. This phrase repeats the "r" sound in "ravages" and "rippling," creating an alliterative effect.
Abraham Lincoln is often credited with popularizing the phrase "government of the people, by the people, for the people" in his Gettysburg Address in 1863, though the exact origins of the phrase are not definitively known.
this sight sucks
President Abraham Lincoln spoke this phrase as part of his famous Gettysburg Address.
It doesn't really mean anything but is an amusing alliterative phrase used by a cartoon character, whose name escapes me, to express exasperation. Succotash itself is a native North American vegetable dish.
The Gettysburg Address by Abraham Lincoln.
Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln it was part of his Gettysburg address