The alliteration of the "S" (or -iss) sound is sibilance (Smashing, Slashing, Slugging)
Sibilance.
Alliteration using letters such as 's' or 'sh' is actually called Sibilance. The same rules apply with it as alliteration - it just has a different name. Examples would be, "sweeping soot", "the snail slid sideways slowly, secreting slime as he went" "slow stepping on the sand"
== It is alliteration because the first letter of most words in the phrase is the same. == It is both. The "s" and "sh" sounds are repeated, which accounts for alliteration. But also, the sounds of the words imitate the sound that waves would make, splashing to shore.
Yes, slipping and sliding is an example of alliteration because both words start with the same "s" sound, creating a repetition of that sound in close proximity.
Yes, "Sally sells seashells" is an example of alliteration because the words in the phrase start with the same consonant sound (the "s" sound).
A series of words starting with the same consonant sounds is called alliteration. For example, "Sally sells seashells by the seashore" is a phrase that demonstrates alliteration with the repeated "S" sound at the beginning of each word.
round robin
sniper
My mom made marvelous muffins in the morning.
Alliteration using letters such as 's' or 'sh' is actually called Sibilance. The same rules apply with it as alliteration - it just has a different name. Examples would be, "sweeping soot", "the snail slid sideways slowly, secreting slime as he went" "slow stepping on the sand"
· stein
Sprite?
Singapore
springbok
I think its Sammy!
sterol
No. Alliteration's is the possessive singular form.
no difference. sibilance is a subtype of alliteration.