161k views
4 votes
A series of repeated initial consonant sounds is _____.

assonance
consonance
alliteration
onomatopoeia

User Samarth
by
8.2k points

2 Answers

3 votes

ALLITERATION

Another technique poets use is alliteration, the repetition of initial consonant sounds. When Edgar Allan Poe wrote, "not a feather then he fluttered, Till I scarcely more than muttered—Other friends have flown before," he deliberately repeated beginning consonant sounds (the f in feather, fluttered, flown) with the intended effect of driving the lines forcefully into the reader's mind. Alliteration need not create this harsh effect. John Keats, in "Ode to a Nightingale," used alliteration of the same letter, f, to create the opposite effect: "Fade far away, dissolve, and quite forget."

User FKayani
by
7.7k points
6 votes
This is called an alliteration.

An example of alliteration would be V's famous speech in V for Vendetta where he uses the letter V at the beginning of each word in an entire speech.
User Alan Mullett
by
8.3k points