- Assonance
Assonance is repetition of vowel sounds to create internal rhyming within
phrase s orsentences , and together withalliteration and consonance serves as one of the building blocks of verse. For example, in the phrase "Do you like blue?", the "oo" (ou/ue) sound is repeated within the sentence and is assonant.Assonance is more a feature of verse than
prose . It is used in (mainly modern) English-language poetry, and is particularly important inOld French , Spanish andCeltic languages .The
eponym ous student of Willy Russell's "Educating Rita " described it as "getting the rhyme wrong".*Hear the mellow wedding bells. —
Edgar Allan Poe , "The Bells "
*And murmuring of innumerable bees -Alfred Lord Tennyson , "The Princess" VII.203
*The crumbling thunder of seas —Robert Louis Stevenson
*That solitude which suits abstruser musings -Samuel Taylor Coleridge
*The scurrying furred small friars squeal in the dowse -Dylan Thomas
*Dead in the middle of little Italy, little did we know that we riddled two middle men who didn't do diddily." -Big Pun
*It's hot and it's monotonous. -Stephen Sondheim ,Sunday in the Park with George , "It's Hot Up Here"
*tunditur unda -Catullus 11
*With the sound, with the sound, with the sound of the ground. -David Bowie , "Law (Earthlings on Fire)"
*on a proud round cloud in a white high night -e.e. cummings , "if a cheerrulest Elephantangelchild should sitAssonance can also be used in forming
proverb s, often a form of short poetry. In theOromo language of Ethiopia, note the use of a single vowel throughout the following proverb, an extreme form of assonance:
*"kan mana baala, aʔlaa gaala" (“A leaf at home, but a camel elsewhere"; somebody who has a big reputation among those who do not know him well.)In more modern verse, stressed assonance has become the main literary device in modern rapFact|date=June 2008, starting with gangsta rap like 2Pac in the 1990sFact|date=June 2008, departing from rap's foundations in the 80's rapper like Slick RickFact|date=June 2008 when rhyme at the end of each line was the cornerstone of poetic expressionFact|date=June 2008. An example is Public Enemy's 'Don't Believe The Hype': "Their pens and pads I stash 'cause I've had it / I'm not an addict, fiending for static / I see their tape recorder and I grab it / No, you can't have it back, silly rabbit / I'm going to my media assassin / Harry Allen, I've got to ask him / Yo Harry, you're a writer, are we that type? / 'Don't believe the hype'"."
See also
*
Alliteration
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