No, consonance is not an example of figurative language. Consonance is a literary device used in poetry and prose where the repetition of consonant sounds occurs within or at the end of words. Figurative language, on the other hand, includes devices like similes, metaphors, and personification that create imaginative comparisons and expressions.
This is an example of an engish figurative language.
no
Alliteration, consonance, and assonance are types of figurative language that affect the sound of a poem by creating musicality through repetition of sounds. Alliteration repeats initial consonant sounds, consonance repeats consonant sounds within words, and assonance repeats vowel sounds within words. Together, they can create a rhythmic, melodic quality in a poem.
Metaphor
A simile is a figurative language that compares two things that are alike in some way. An example is the phrase as cute as a kitten.
The phrase "a robber in a cabin" is an example of consonance because of the repeated "b" sound in the words "robber" and "cabin." Consonance is the repetition of consonant sounds, which creates a musical quality in the language.
Yes, "goggle-eyed" is an example of figurative language known as a metaphor. It is used to describe someone with wide, bulging eyes in a figurative way without directly stating it.
you and me together
Allusion
hpyerbole
meter