Examples of simile and alliteration of the poem bang the drum
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Explanation:
The refrain the "whole world can hear"sustains the energy of the song. "Little louder" is a repeated alliteration similarily "whole world" is a repeated consanance. The author presents a simile "like the wind" singing louder and banging the drum louder are examples of auditory images.
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Answer:
The song's momentum is maintained by the refrain, "the whole world can hear." Similar to how "whole world" is a repeated alliteration/ consonance, "little louder" is an example of repeated alliteration. The writer uses the metaphor/ simile "like the wind" to sing louder and beat the drum. Examples of auditory imagery include louder.
Explanation :
- Though it is not exclusive to that genre, creative writing is where alliteration is most frequently used as a literary device.
- Alliteration is the recurrence of a sound at the start of several words that are near to one another.
- When several words in a phrase start with the same stressed consonant sound, an alliteration is created.
- The repeat of at least one beginning sound is necessary, although the initial consonant is not required to be used again.
- Consonant sounds must be consistent across a letter.
- A simile is a rhetorical device in which two objects are clearly contrasted.
- Similes stand out from other metaphors because they emphasise similarities between two items using comparison terms like "like," "as," "so," or "than," whereas other metaphors imply a comparison between the two.
- There are two varieties of similes you will encounter:
- those who use the comparison qualifier "as." “She was as tall as a tree” ,for instance.
- those who compare things by utilising the adjective "like." “He sings like an angel” for instance.
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