Humanities › English What Is Alliteration in English? The Different Meanings of Repeated Consonant Sounds Share Flipboard Email Print Cactu Soup/Getty Images English English Grammar An Introduction to Punctuation Writing By Richard Nordquist Richard Nordquist English and Rhetoric Professor Ph.D., Rhetoric and English, University of Georgia M.A., Modern English and American Literature, University of Leicester B.A., English, State University of New York Dr. Richard Nordquist is professor emeritus of rhetoric and English at Georgia Southern University and the author of several university-level grammar and composition textbooks. Learn about our Editorial Process Updated on June 08, 2018 Alliteration (also known as head rhyme, initial rhyme, or front rhyme) is a device in written and spoken languages in which a string of words and phrases repeats the same letter or letter combinations. Much of children's poetry uses alliteration: "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers" is a memorable tongue-twister taught to English-speaking children. It is initially alliterative on the letter p—and internally repetitive on the letters p and ck. But it isn't the specific letter that makes a phrase alliterative, it is the sound: so you could say that the alliterative function of Peter and his peppers includes the "p_k" and "p_p" sounds. Meaning in Poetry Alliteration is probably most often used for humorous reasons, to elicit a giggle in children, but in skilled hands, it can mean quite a bit more. In "The Bells" American poet Edgar Allan Poe memorably used it to illustrate the emotional power of different types of bells: "Hear the sledges with their bells—Silver bells!What a world of merriment their melody foretells!Hear the loud alarum bells—Brazen bells!What tale of terror, now, their turbulency tells!" Songwriter Stephen Stills used a combination of hard and soft "c" sounds and "l" sounds to illustrate the emotional disarray of a pair of lovers ending their relationship in "Heartlessly Hoping". Notice that the "c" sounds are the conflicted narrator, and the "l" sound is that of his lady. Stand by the stairway you'll see something certain to tell youConfusion has its costLove isn't lying it's loose in a lady who lingersSaying she is lostAnd choking on hello In Hamilton, Lin-Manuel Miranda's tour-de-force Broadway musical, Aaron Burr sings: Constantly confusing, confounding the British henchmen Everyone give it up for America’s favorite fighting Frenchman! But it can be quite a subtle tool as well. In the example below, poet Robert Frost uses "w" as a soft recollection of quiet winter days in "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening": He will not see me stopping hereto watch his woods fill up with snow The Science of Alliteration The repeating patterns of sound including alliteration have been tied to the retention of information, as a mnemonic device that helps people recall a phrase and its meaning. In a study conducted by linguists Frank Boers and Seth Lindstromberg, people who were learning English as a second language found it easier to retain the meaning of idiomatic phrases that included alliteration, such as "from pillar to post" and "carbon copies" and "spic and span." Psycholinguistics studies such as that by P.E. Bryant and colleagues suggests that children with a sensitivity to rhyme and alliteration learn to read sooner and more rapidly than those who don't, even more than those measured against IQ or educational background. Latin and Other Languages Alliteration is used by writers of most Indo-European languages, including English, Old English, Anglo-Saxon, Irish, Sanskrit, and Icelandic. Alliteration was used by classical Roman prose writers, and occasionally in poetry. Most writing about the subject by the Roman themselves describes the use of alliteration in prose texts, especially in religious and legal formulas. There are some exceptions, such as the Roman poet Gnaeus Naevius: libera lingua loquemur ludis LiberalibusWe shall speak with a free tongue at the festival of Liber. And Lucretius in "De Rerum Natura" uses it to full effect, with a repeated "p" sound that mimics the sound of mighty ker-plunking splashes made by giants crossing vast oceans: Denique cur homines tantos natura pararenon potuit, pedibus qui pontum per vada possenteAnd why can’t nature make men so largethat they cross the depths of the sea with their feet Sources Blake, N.F. "Rhythmical Alliteration." Modern Philology 67.2 (1969): 118-24. Print. Boers, Frank, and Seth Lindstromberg. "Finding Ways to Make Phrase-Learning Feasible: The Mnemonic Effect of Alliteration." System 33.2 (2005): 225-38. Print. Bryant, P.E., et al. "Rhyme and Alliteration, Phoneme Detection, and Learning to Read" Developmental Psychology 26.3 (1990): 429-38. Print. Clarke, W. M. "Intentional Alliteration in Vergil and Ovid." Latomus 35.2 (1976): 276-300. Print. Duncan, Edwin. "Metrical and Alliterative Relationships in Old English and Old Saxon Verse." Studies in Philology 91.1 (1994): 1-12. Print Langer, Kenneth. "Some Suggestive Uses of Alliteration in Sanskrit Court Poetry." Journal of the American Oriental Society 98.4 (1978): 438-45. Print. Lea, R. Brooke, et al. "Sweet Silent Thought: Alliteration and Resonance in Poetry Comprehension." Psychological Science 19.7 (2008): 709-16. Print. Cite this Article Format mla apa chicago Your Citation Nordquist, Richard. "What Is Alliteration in English?" ThoughtCo, Apr. 5, 2023, thoughtco.com/alliteration-definition-1692387. Nordquist, Richard. (2023, April 5). What Is Alliteration in English? Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/alliteration-definition-1692387 Nordquist, Richard. "What Is Alliteration in English?" ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/alliteration-definition-1692387 (accessed May 29, 2023). copy citation