No its alliteration
onomatopoeia
Not necessarily. While nearly all fossils, including seashells, are found in sedimentary rock, most sedimentary rock does not contain fossils. Even then, those fossils will not necessarily be seashells. If you do find a rock with seashells, though, you can be pretty much guaranteed that it is sedimentary.
seashells
An oxymoron juxtaposes two contradictory words for the purpose of description. An example of a sentence using an oxymoron would be: He was the recipient of the same crazy wisdom that his father had.
No. An oxymoron is when a noun is described with a most antonymous adjective, like 'peaceful war'. For a noun that will match 'faded' for an oxymoron, 'faded illumination', 'faded lustre', 'faded shine', 'faded dazzle', 'faded light' or 'faded fluoroscence' will do. For an adjective that will match 'glory' for an oxymoron, 'horrible glory', 'hideous glory', 'terrible glory', 'ugly glory', 'distalentful glory' or 'useless glory' will do.
sally !!
She sold seashells by the seashore
Sally sold seashells by the seashore. Annie argued with animosity. Bill bought a barrel of bread.
The number of sea shells that Sally sold at the sea shore is not explicitly stated in the question. Without specific numerical information, it is impossible to determine the exact quantity of sea shells Sally sold. The question lacks the necessary data to provide a numerical answer.
To accurately determine the amount of seashells Sally sold, we would need more specific information such as the type of seashells, their individual weights or quantities, and the selling price per unit. Without this data, it is impossible to provide an exact answer. It is important to have precise details in order to calculate the total number or weight of seashells sold by Sally.
The Seychelles
yes
1).- All of them2).- However many she had 3).- Sally sold 4,835,256 seashells by the seashore. (Either she's good, or she sold them all cheaply, or for free.)4).- Sun-bonneted Sally swiftly and surely sold sixty-six thousand six hundred sixty-six spicy, saucy, sausage-scented seashells by the sizzlingly sun-soaked seashore shortly before sunset, in packets of seven silly-shaped stainless steel saucepans with sixteen stupendously sumptous, sexy sizzling sisters sauntering around suggestively in their skimpy strapless swimsuits!
Sally sells seashells by the Arizona shore.
Mean Monkeys Mock Many Marvelous Mammals At Memphis Zoo
Yes, "Sally sells seashells" is an example of alliteration because the words in the phrase start with the same consonant sound (the "s" sound).
The word is "sibilance" "Shelly sells sea shells by the sea shore," and "Silly Samuel sold slippery snakes, slimy slugs, and solid stumps" are examples