here's one from a valentine fantasy i made up.it's called "love-legs & lavender".
love-legs likes lavender.
hope this was helpful.
Lively lizards lounging lazily.
The alliteration in the phrase "Lo we have listened to many a lay" is between the words "listened" and "lay". Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds in close proximity, and in this example, the "l" sound is repeated in the beginning of each word.
"Wow" is an interjection that starts with the letter L.
"Libya" and "Lebanon" start with "L".
"Lacky" rhymes with "lucky" and starts with the letter L.
That is the correct spelling of "alliteration" (using multiple words beginning with the same letter).
The moisture from the May Showers makes my motherboard moldy, and electric emptiness is always ejected to erroneous areas. The repeated consonants are alliteration, while the repeated vowel sounds are assonance. This is easy to remember because alliteration has two repeating "l" sounds, while assonance looks a lot emptier, like a vowel sound could be considered to be.
Lively lizards lounging lazily.
Yes, "lucky to linger" is an example of alliteration because of the repetition of the "l" sound at the beginning of both words.
An example of a alliteration of love would be:
an alliteration is like.. example.. "Abby's aunt ate apples in august" the majority of the words start with ''a'' so you could start with Martin Luther King had a dream....... and continue with some with some words that start with M, L, K, or D repeating but different words make sure it makes sense
Yes, there is alliteration in Bridge to Terabithia. An example of alliteration in the book is the phrase "Terabithia, the land that lay under the shadow of the magic" which repeats the "l" sound in "lay," "under," and "shadow."
The alliteration in the phrase "Lo we have listened to many a lay" is between the words "listened" and "lay". Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds in close proximity, and in this example, the "l" sound is repeated in the beginning of each word.
Example of alliteration are An angle-worm (a) And ate (a) Drank a dew (d) Looked like (l)
linear
Linconton
L. Paul Sutton has written: 'Variations in Federal criminal sentences' -- subject(s): Prison sentences, Statistics