Examples of alliteration in the following topics:
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- Alliteration is a stylistic device whereby a series of words begin with the same consonant sound, which can help your audience's listening.
- When you use the same repetitive sound at the beginning of a series of words or phrases, you are using alliteration.
- Alliteration adds a textural complexity to your speech that makes your words more engaging.
- Alliteration is a technique often found in poetry, so take the time to get creative with the words and phrasing of your speech.
- The game of Tic Tac Toe is a perfect example of alliteration, where each word of the game's name begins with the letter T.
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- Fu poems employ alternating rhyme and prose, varying line length, close alliteration, onomatopoeia, loose parallelism, and extensive cataloging of their topics.
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- Thoughts must come into being in heavily rhythmic, balanced patterns, in repetitions or antithesis, in alliterations or assonances, in epithetic and other formulary expressions.
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- To be sure, alliterations are rarely perfect, and reducing any broad-ranging topic into categories usually ends up neglecting something that others see as valuable; however, the 7-P model has proven to be helpful both in and out of the classroom so it is used here as a framework.