Alliteration: Difference between revisions
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Alliteration is the literary device of having two associated stressed syllables, normally at the beginning of a word, starting either with the same consonant or with a vowel. In poetry, the words would normally be in the same line (or, in some cases, pair of lines), in prose they would simply be close together. | |||
In poetry, alliteration may either be part of the structure of a poem, or used for a particular effect. In the first case, alliterative verse, it is used in accordance with the rules of that particular type of verse, and the distribution of the alliterated syllables would probably have a fixed relation to the half-line. In the second case the use of the device is up to the writer, and the effect can occasionally be ludicrous. |
Revision as of 11:47, 15 December 2013
Alliteration is the literary device of having two associated stressed syllables, normally at the beginning of a word, starting either with the same consonant or with a vowel. In poetry, the words would normally be in the same line (or, in some cases, pair of lines), in prose they would simply be close together.
In poetry, alliteration may either be part of the structure of a poem, or used for a particular effect. In the first case, alliterative verse, it is used in accordance with the rules of that particular type of verse, and the distribution of the alliterated syllables would probably have a fixed relation to the half-line. In the second case the use of the device is up to the writer, and the effect can occasionally be ludicrous.