shiny, sinuous shark snaking silently through the sea
no
Hammerhead.
no its not
It is uncertain as to where the word "shark" came from because before the 16th century sharks were known as "sea dogs". It is believed that the word came from the Yucatec Maya word "xok" which is pronounced "shok". Though there are speculations of sailors and fishermen in the 1400s and 1500s using the word "sharke" to describe certain marine creatures and fish.
The noun 'shark' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a thing, a living thing.
The word shark begins with an "sh" sound, which is also found in words such as she, shack, shell, shift, shallow, sure, shock, etc. An alliterative sentence could be, she was shocked by the shark.
I love the word Alliteration
Alliteration is hard.
"battered beatitudes" would be an alliteration of the word broken.
Alliteration for toast
The word "alliteration" is a noun. It refers to the repetition of the same consonant sound at the beginning of nearby words.
Yes, you can have an alliteration with the word "pumpkin." An example could be: "Perfectly plump pumpkins."
An example of alliteration for the word 'rainbow' is "radiant rainbow".
alliteration alliteration
No. Alliteration's is the possessive singular form.
Alliteration-reapets the letter through out the sentence
The word you are trying to find is alliteration.