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[personal profile] undyingking
#6 in an occasional series -- your challenge is to use it at least once today.

Alliteration and Assonance

Literally, something like "together-letteredness" / "sounding together".

Alliteration is the use of the same sound (usually a consonant) at the beginning of successive words, eg. "cool, calm and collected". The related Assonance is the use of sounds resembling each other (usually vowels) within successive words, eg. "how now, brown cow". To confuse things slightly, if you use repeated consonant sounds but not at the beginning of the words, this is assonance rather than alliteration, eg. "he was killed, chilled, cold" repeats the "-ld" sound assonantly.

The idea is to get a compelling rhetorical power from the audile effect of the repetition. [Is 'audile' a real word? -- doesn't look quite right...] It has the advantage of also working in print to some extent -- those repeated "c"s in the first example definitely catch the eye. Unlike most of these devices, you can even use it subtly in conversation without sounding too pretentious!

You will have noticed that these two devices take their names frm Latin rather than from Greek, as all the others hitherto. Why this should be, I don't know -- maybe this technique doesn't work as well in Greek for some reason, so they never bothered naming it.

Date: 2005-09-27 01:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wimble.livejournal.com
Mr OED, he say...
(about audile)

A. adj. Pertaining to or received through the auditory nerves. Of a person: of or pertaining to an audile.

1897 19th Cent. Aug. 229 The phenomena..may be dichotomised as (1) audile, (2) visual. The audile subdivide into (1) Footsteps. (2) Voices..(3) Raps..(4) and (5) Noises..(6) A detonating noise. 1909 Daily Chron. 22 Feb. 4/7 Unless you are a microcephalous idiot, you are either Audile, Motile, or Visile. 1919 E. BARKER in H. G. Wells Outl. Hist. xv. 86/2 Homer..is audile, not visual. 1956 H. READ Art of Sculpture iv. 71 Thus there are visual types, tactile types, and audile types.

B. n. A person in whom auditory images are predominant over motile and visual presentations.

1886 Mind July 415 M. Paulhan, an audile, declares..he can represent the auditory images of i and u while the motor presentation of a is being presented. 1917 J. ADAMS Student's Guide 23 Some prefer to learn through the eye, others like to learn through the ear, still others through the sense of touch. The first kind are called visuals, the second audiles, the third tactiles.

Date: 2005-09-27 01:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] undyingking.livejournal.com
What about "audial"? WHat I wanted really was something like an equivalent to "visual"...

Date: 2005-09-27 01:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cardinalsin.livejournal.com
Auditory is to audition as visual is to vision.

Date: 2005-09-27 02:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] undyingking.livejournal.com
Good examples!

Date: 2005-09-30 10:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jackfirecat.livejournal.com
Arrow-aim and the heart
Alliterative they say
Anglo-Saxon art

Assonance as the snake
Slakes his thirst betimes
Sucking unlucky half-rhymes


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