We are taken through a labyrinth of puns, amphibolies, alliterations, symmetries, inversions, analogies, and in a variety of tones. |
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In the poet's medieval French, the verse displays intricate internal rhymes and numerous alliterations. |
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The play on words, imagery and alliterations that fall in place so spontaneously are a treat for the philologist. |
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Parallel constructions and alliterations appear in the text, which remains enigmatic. |
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The following runes constitute a skaldic poem their rhythm and alliterations show. |
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An epic like Beowulf was composed for the ear, with careful alliterations within each line. |
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Maybe Jane Austen kicked it off with her clever, cunning titles that pulled in the curious reader with their tongue-tripping alliterations. |
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The author's alliterations are lovely, lyrical and luminescent. And her clever text captures and complements the artwork. |
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The alliterations in the original poem are certainly very important and activate the magic of the runes. |
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It's the style — the rhetorical cadences, the theatrical beats and pauses and alliterations, the overwrought metaphors and wordplays — that American commentators simply can't match. |
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Another interesting thing in this song is the quantity of alliterations. |
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In 1964, while doing aesthetic research, the author was intrigued by the complexity of forms made by chance, the primary colors and the recurring alliterations, which were testimonies to the success of their funtion. |
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