(All vowels are held to
alliterate with each other.) It will be seen therefore that (1) emphatic stress and (2) alliteration are the basal principles of the system.
I call it Freddy, which I thought was neatly
alliterate, so I could introduce it to our grandchildren.
Finally, I say to Dr MacMillan, I would rather be grammatically
alliterate than politically illiberal.
In classical Old English poetry, if a verse contains several unstressed syllables, these tend to accumulate in a single sequence either before the first alliterating lift of type B and C verses or immediately after the first lift of type A, in which case the second lift must
alliterate (Duncan 1993).
And he really did
alliterate like that when you talked to him." -- Neil Gaiman, via Twitter.
The wide variety of reasons for disengagement in reading of books suggest that infrequent parental readers cannot be broadly characterised as
alliterate, with independent reading skill, but choosing not to read (Decker, 1986), as for many of these parents, not reading was not a choice, but rather a result of a range of factors, some of which were entirely beyond their control.
For example, he never packs three alliterating stresses in his on-verse, nor in the off-verse does he ever
alliterate on the second stressed syllable.
Lesesne (2006), for example, noted that teacher read-alouds, in addition to motivating
alliterate students to read, can also introduce avid readers to a world of books they might not otherwise find on their own.
language frequently causes him to
alliterate on liquid l's,
Like Kris Jenner, she doesn't
alliterate boys, hence Rob Kardashian and George Pig.
Several of the shorter poems in the Piers Plowman tradition
alliterate on 's' in the line in which the narrator enters sleep, but they neither use 'slip' or 'slide', nor share the Gawain-poet's ethical concerns regarding sleepers themselves.
albliterration in lieu of the ken to
alliterate and obliterate