When someone mentions "flesh eating disease" they are usually referring to Necrotising fasciitis (NF), which doesn't sound much like "bola".
The "brain eating amoeba" is Naegleria fowleri - which doesn't sound much like "bola" either.
The disease that sound most similar to "bola" is Ebola, aka Ebola virus disease (EVD), aka Ebola hemorrhagic fever (EHF). It isn't a flesh eating disease but it IS virulent. Ebola is known to cause internal and external bleeding due to decreased blood clotting - resulting in bloody stools, vomiting (or coughing up) blood, and/or bleeding into the whites of the eyes. Death usually comes from low blood pressure from fluid loss. It kills around 50% of those infected within about 2 weeks, but that's only an average - mortality ranges during past outbreaks have ranged from ~25% to 90%+ (probably depending on the strain, conditions in the area where the outbreak occurs, and the availability of advanced medical care).
The instrument that sounds similar to a glockenspiel is called a xylophone.
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There is a disease (skin disease) that sounds a bit like "sir," called psoriasis (pronounced ser-eye-uh-sis)
The repetition of similar vowel sounds in a sentence is called "assonance." This technique is used for phonetic effect and can create rhythm and musicality in writing.
rhyme
b.e.a.t
there are a lot of different kinds of blue pills, but before eating it sounds like an antibiotic for unrinary track infection but not neccesarily the rule.
The pattern in which similar end sounds occur in a poem is called a rhyme scheme. This is when the last syllables or words in two or more lines of poetry rhyme with each other.
That is called consonance. Consonance is the repetition of consonant sounds at the end of words in close proximity.
No, a word with similar spelling is not necessarily a rhyming word. Rhyming words have similar ending sounds, while words with similar spelling may have different sounds. Rhyming words create a musical or poetic effect in writing.
Some doves make sounds similar to owls, but it's called a "coo", not a hoot.
sounds that indicated the wolves were eating the colt