alliteration as a stylistic device

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LITERARY STYLISTICS ALLITERATION

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Page 1: Alliteration as a stylistic device

LITERARY

STYLISTICS

ALLITERATION

Page 2: Alliteration as a stylistic device

WHAT IS ALLITERATION?

Page 3: Alliteration as a stylistic device

DEFINITION

In a basic definition of alliteration, we would

say that the initial consonant sounds of

words are repeated. Some examples: sweet,

sweep, swallow. But the technical definition

is a relationship between words when the

following is present:

Page 4: Alliteration as a stylistic device

• Consonants just before the first accented

vowels are the same.

• The vowels are not pronounced alike.

• The following consonants are different.

Here are a few examples:

sweet – swallow, lime – like, fellow – fat

Page 5: Alliteration as a stylistic device

J. A. Cuddon’s Definition

• It is a figure of speech in which consonant,

especially at the beginning of words, or

stressed syllables, are repeated. It is a very old

device related to verse but it is used in prose.

In old English poetry Alliteration was a

continual and an essential part of the metrical

scheme.

Page 6: Alliteration as a stylistic device

Examples

• "The fair breeze blew, the white foam flew,

The furrow followed free;

We were the first that ever burst

Into that silent sea."

(Samuel Taylor Coleridge, "The Rime of the Ancient

Mariner")

• "The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation."

(Henry David Thoreau, Walden)

Page 7: Alliteration as a stylistic device
Page 8: Alliteration as a stylistic device

• Alliteration is common in nonsense verse:

Be lenient with lobsters, and ever kind to

crabs,

And be not disrespectful to cuttle-fish or

dabs;

Chase not the Cochin-China, chaff not the ox

obese,

And babble not of feather-beds in company

with geese.

Page 9: Alliteration as a stylistic device
Page 10: Alliteration as a stylistic device

It is found also in tongue-twisters:

1. Angela Abigail Applewhite ate anchovies

and artichokes.

2. Bertha Bartholomew blew big, blue

bubbles.

Page 11: Alliteration as a stylistic device
Page 12: Alliteration as a stylistic device

• It is in jingles:

Dingle dingle doosey,

The cat’s in the well,

The dog’s away to Bellingen

To buy the bairn a bell.

Page 13: Alliteration as a stylistic device

• And in Pater, beloved of drill sergeants and the like:

Now then, you horrible shower of heathen, have I

your complete hattention? Hotherwise I shall

heave the whole hairy lot of you into the salt

box where you will live on hopeful

hallucination far as long as hit pleases God and

the commanding hofficer.

Page 14: Alliteration as a stylistic device

• Alliteration gave the language a musical

quality. It played the same role as rhyme in

Old English poetry.

• Alliteration is wildly used in Modern English.

• Songs, nursery rhymes, newspaper headlines

and adds often contain ALLITERATION

Page 15: Alliteration as a stylistic device
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Page 17: Alliteration as a stylistic device

REMEMBER

Page 18: Alliteration as a stylistic device
Page 19: Alliteration as a stylistic device

THANK YOU FOR YOUR

HATENTION