English, asked by shreyashkachwah, 9 months ago

Figure of speech of the line pink, fragile,
quick to fall​

Answers

Answered by bhandarypranith69
6

Answer:

alliteration

Explanation:

as the sound of the consonant 'f' is repeated

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Answered by presentmoment
7

Answer:

The figure of speech found in the line pink, fragile, quick to fall​ is alliteration.

Explanation:

Pink, fragile, quick to fall is the line from, “The Cherry”, a poem written by Ruskin Bond. There is a repetition of the consonant ‘f’ so the figure of speech is Alliteration. Alliteration is where a consonant is repeated often in a sentence. It is based on the sound rather than the word itself.

It evolves some sort of rhyme or rhythm in a sentence.  The most common alliterations that we hear are in the company names for it to be catchy. For example, Pay pal, American Airlines, Coco cola. In a sentence to give a style, format alliteration is used. For example, we have the famous tongue twister: Betty bought a bitter butter.

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