If used close to another word that starts with the letter 'a' as in the example, "All Amy's Allergies made her go achoo!" then it would be considered an alliteration, but not by itself. Alliteration requires at least two words with the same front sound.
Achoo is, however, an onomatopoeia.
Word World - 2007 Duck Saves Spider's Web Caterpillar Gets a Home 2-2 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
Alliteration is a literary (or "rhetorical") technique that strings a series of words who's initial syllable sounds the same. (fun fact: "syllable sounds the same" is a good example of this technique) To create an alliterative phrase with "circus" you need words that have the same first syllable sound. An example would be: Silly Sally saw a super circus.
In the book "Holes" by Louis Sachar, an example of alliteration can be found in the line "Stanley Yelnats was given a choice." The repetition of the "s" sound in "Stanley" and "choice" creates an alliterative effect. This literary device helps to create a sense of rhythm and emphasis in the text, drawing attention to the character and the decision he is faced with.
Alliteration absolutely always advances an argument, affirmatively answering alphabetically. Seriously, it is a literary convention where by using at least three words in a row that all start with the same letter, it puts it in another's memory better. It's another way of being poetical, but it need not involve rhyme. Hopefully helpful hints! Ku Klux Klan is alliterative in the sense that it puts it in the memory more, but it is a name, an acronym, and it is doubtful they were seriously shooting for alliteration.
Alliteration is a literary device referring to the same consonant sound being used at the beginning of multiple words:Big blue bagSeven snakes slithering slowlyPeter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers
The word "achoo" is an onomatopoeic word, representing the sound of a sneeze. It is not alliterative, lyrical, or elliptic.
The sound of a sneeze can be written as "achoo," "achoo," or "atchoo."
Pertaining to, or characterized by, alliteration; as, alliterative poetry.
An Achoo choo! Train
Because some people think the sound made whilst sneezing is achoo.
Yes! "Achoo" is an onomatopoeia because it is used to describe the sound it resembles (in this case, "achoo" is the word used to describe the sound of someone sneezing).
achoo as in your sneezing
An alliterative sentence for dilemma is "Danny dared Don to draw a dramatic dilemma."
achoo
Alliterative means that the phrase has words that sound the same at the beginning, so "iguana ices" has the i at the beginning of each word. Not sure what an iguana ice is, but it is alliterative just because of the letters.
Harry and His Bucket Full of Dinosaurs - 2005 Achoo is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
not all people do..