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alliteration

/əˈlɪdəˌreɪʃən/
/əlɪtəˈreɪʃən/
IPA guide

Other forms: alliterations

Alliteration is when you use words that have the same sound at the beginning, like "Stellar students synthesize sweet sentences."

It's a time-honored poetic device to make a string of words start with the same consonant sound, and that is what alliteration labels. For example, in A Midsummer's Night Dream, Shakespeare broke out the B's: "With bloody blameful blade he bravely broached his bloody boiling breast." And in the song "From A to G" by Blackalicious, a verse with words beginning with the "C" sound describes a "crazy character, constantly creating concoctions."

Definitions of alliteration
  1. noun
    use of the same consonant at the beginning of each stressed syllable in a line of verse
    see moresee less
    type of:
    rhyme, rime
    correspondence in the sounds of two or more lines (especially final sounds)
Pronunciation
US
/əˈlɪdəˌreɪʃən/
UK
/əlɪtəˈreɪʃən/
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