Repeated vowel sounds is assonance.
Repeated consonant sounds (in a word or words) is consonance.
The repetition of stressed consonants is called alliteration.
The term assonance refers to the close succession of similar vowel sounds within a line of prose or poetry.
Example:
He had heard the recurrent murmur of words. (multiple UR sounds)
The repetition of vowel sounds is called assonance.
assonance
This is known as internal rhyme. Internal rhyme occurs when words within the same line or within nearby lines of poetry have the same vowel sounds but different consonant sounds. It can add musicality and emphasis to the language.
Assonance is the term used to describe the repetition of vowel sounds without the repetition of consonants in a phrase or sentence.
A necessary feature for a pattern is repetition or predictability. Patterns are defined by the regularity in which elements are repeated or follow a specific sequence. Without this feature, it would not be considered a pattern.
9999
8889
9774
9876 - 123= 9753
The largest 4 digit number with repetition is 9999. The smallest 3 digit number without repetition is 102 9999 - 102 = 9897
Largest 4 digit number with repetition is 9999 Largest 3 digit number without repetition is 987 Difference is 9999 - 987 = 9012.
9876-102 9704
8888
9,876 without any number used more than once, 9,898 without side-by-side repetition, and 9,897 for a number without pattern.