Topic: accept alliteration

Always alliterate any and all available adjectives, adverbs, adjuncts, and articles, as aggregated alliterations always attracts an audience; an amazing advantage above alternative assonance, anaphora, acrostics, and allegories, all authors agree. Any actual alliteration application aids an amateur author at accumulating accolades accordingly, and adds an additional analytical atmosphere. Although alliteration achieves above any alternatives, any amazing arrangement applied accurately advances, and an author accrues and accumulates achievements as amateur-ship atomizes.

Re: accept alliteration

Well. that's amazing! And I learned a useful word, too. Anaphora. To repeat a word again and again for emphasis or other literary reason.

Technically, isn't alliteration reference to consonants?  "Always alliterate" is alliteration because of the "l". The "a" sound in both do not sound the same, in fact.  "any and all available adjectives" has three different "a" sounds among the five words (maybe four if "and" and "adjective" are slightly different because of the difference in monosyllabic versus stressed syllable).

Re: accept alliteration

I kind of laughed when my son posted this b/c technically, it's not alliteration. It's assonance. Alliteration by definition is the repetition of beginning consonant sounds. A is a vowel--thus assonance.

Re: accept alliteration

Janet Taylor-Perry wrote:

I kind of laughed when my son posted this b/c technically, it's not alliteration. It's assonance. Alliteration by definition is the repetition of beginning consonant sounds. A is a vowel--thus assonance.

clever boy, nevertheless; there's hope for America.

Re: accept alliteration

Yes! That's because I taught him well!!!!!! smile Yep. I'm taking all the credit.

Re: accept alliteration

Playing with "L"; "S" ("sh", "z"); and "K"

Lots of luscious lipstick lesbians licking licorice.

Re: accept alliteration

LOL! Have fun. It would be a challenge.