It is one the strength of poetry because the effect
of poetry can depend on the sound of its words.
- Alliteration = the repetition of the same initial consonant sound in a sequence such as tongue twisters. The example is the same with Alliteration in figurative language.
- Assonance -= the repetition of the same vowel sound in a line or lines of poetry. It can be in the beginning, middle and ending. Example: Do you like blue?
- Consonance = the repetition of the same consonant sound can be anywhere at least two words or more in a line or lines of poetry, e.g. Helen hold her horse happily
- Onomatopoeia = Sounds that imitate another sounds. The example is the same with Onomatopoeia in figurative language.
- Refrain = one or more words, phrases, or lines that are repeated regularly in a poem, usually at the end of song lyrics, we also call it as chorus.
- Rhyme = the repetition of the same ending vowel or consonant sound at the end of words. In the rhyme, there are five kinds. They are:
- Masculine = Rhyming sound only one syllable, e.g. Support and Retort
- Feminine = Rhyming sound only two or more syllables, e.g. Turtle and fertile, spitefully and delightfully
- Internal = one or more rhyming within the line, (a word inside a line rhymes with another word on the same line) e.g. I went to town to buy a gown and I took the car and it was not far
- Approximate = word that sound alike at the end, e.g. Same and Came.
- End = rhyming word in the end of
line, (a word at the end of on line rhymes with a word at the end of another
line) e.gO, God of dust and rainbow, help us see (A)
That without dust the rainbow would not be (B)
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