yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Alliteration, Assonance, and Onomatopoeia | Style | Grammar


4m read
·Nov 11, 2024

Hello Garian, hello Rosie, hi David. So, uh, you've caught me mid-scribble in the greatest challenge of my career: will I be able to write the word “onomatopoeia”?

You can do it.

Did I get it?

You did it!

Yes! This is one of my least favorite words to spell, but one of my favorite things to talk about because what we're talking about today is alliteration, assonance, and onomatopoeia.

Uh, and these are all words that are related to the way language sounds. But let's begin with alliteration. Rosie, what is alliteration?

Alliteration is when a series of words all start with the same consonant.

So, what's a good example of that?

Robert Park swims swiftly, surely, and straight ahead.

So you can see that all these pink words here—swam, swiftly, surely, straight ahead—all begin with "S," right? And so this is why we call this alliteration because "S" is a consonant and all of these things share a similar consonant sound.

Now I want to contrast that with assonance, which is what Rosie...

Assonance is when a series of words all start with the same vowel.

Alia abolished all anguish.

You can see all of these words in this sentence in the same vowel neighborhood, right? But my favorite of all is onomatopoeia, which comes from Greek. Uh, and it basically means, like, uh, "onomat" means a name resulting from doing; so really this word just means sounds like what it does.

So, any really anything that you would conceive of as a sound effect, like a word that comes from a sound effect?

Uh, so the bees buzzed, for example. Like, what is “buzzed”? Well, it's the sound that a bee makes; it's what it does. That word is derived from the “bz” sound.

But that's not the only example of onomatopoeia we have compiled here.

Okay, we've got "splat." That's kind of the sound of something hitting pavement.

Yep, we've got "clang," which is like the clanging of a bell.

We've got "bang," which sounds like something exploding.

Whoosh, which sounds like air or wind.

Beep.

Yeah, beep sounds like a beeping.

I mean, like that is literally... So if you are trying to summon up the actual sound of a thing and transcribe it and use it as a noun or verb, you're using onomatopoeia.

I know it's a terrifying looking word, right? Like no one word should have this many vowels in front of the other. I get it. I get it.

Uh, I'm terrified of spelling this word, but I managed to do it, apparently, and now you know what it means.

And that should take away some of its scariness and impart to you some of its power. Because here in KH Academy, we want you to have the power to harness language, and specifically today to harness these three different language styles.

So, alliteration—repeating the same consonant a bunch of times in a row—so swimming swiftly, surely, and straight ahead.

Assonance, where you repeat the same vowel like "abolished all anguish," and onomatopoeia, where you make a word that sounds like what the word's effect is.

So, the bees buzzed; the pudding cup went splat; the boxing bell fell to the floor with a clang; the firework went off with a bang; a flight of bats whooshed past my head; and the little baby robot beeped at me insistently.

I like those! How can a robot be a baby?

I think it's just the size, right?

Sure, not the age.

Yeah, that's legitimate.

So, okay, so I guess the question is now you know what these things are, but Rosie, why would a person want to use these techniques in language, whether written or spoken?

That's a great question! Writers can use some of these techniques to basically use this sound to get across a pattern. Like, if you're going to use words that all sound the same at the beginning with a bunch of S's, that kind of could potentially build some momentum to your sentence.

Like, it kind of makes the reader sit up and pay attention too. It's like, "Oh, this is an interesting pattern."

So, that could be one reason why a writer might use, for example, alliteration.

Yeah, so it's a way to express a pattern. And to build on what you were saying, you can also—it's just a good attention grabber.

And it's also useful for its own sake, just as a technique for writing prose or poetry. Like, it's something you—it's a useful property of language to be able to sometimes access, right?

And a good example with onomatopoeia is you're really capturing the sound.

So, the reader is really able to be immersed in the experience even more fully. You can hear the sounds that are happening, the buzzing of the bees or...

Yeah, it just puts you even more in the story that the writer is telling. That's why you would want to learn how to use assonance, alliteration, and onomatopoeia.

You can learn anything.

David out.

Rosie out.

More Articles

View All
God Is My Drug | Explorer
[music playing] TIM SAMUELS: I’m in Jerusalem, and I’m searching for ecstasy. [music playing] My search is for the Na Nach, a small sect of highly religious Jews who themselves are dedicated to the search for spiritual ecstasy. Religion as I knew it was …
Cyrus the Great establishes the Achaemenid Empire | World History | Khan Academy
As we enter into the 6th Century BCE, the dominant power in the region that we now refer to as Iran was the Median Empire. The Median Empire, I’ll draw the rough border right over here, was something like that, and you can see the dominant region of Media…
The Stock Market Is About To Flip | DO THIS NOW
What’s up, grandmas? Guys, here according to the caption. So, as we approach the new year of 2022, we got to talk about something that’s getting brought up a lot more often lately, now that the stock market is returning back to its previous all-time highs…
Spaceship You
Pandemic season. This is not the first, nor will it be the last time you lock yourself down and we isolate from each other to protect ourselves and to protect those more vulnerable than ourselves. The practical effect of this isolation on you is that your…
Ancient Predator Had a Killer Jaw | National Geographic
Curse of the buzzsaw came in swirling oceans. 275 million years ago lived one of the top predators of its time. If you look over, it was like a mutant creature from a horror movie. It looks like a shark with a terrifying buzzsaw in its jaw. Its bite was a…
Diagramming how a bill becomes a law in the U.S.
What we’re going to do in this video is diagram out how a bill can become a law. I make a distinction between a non-tax bill and a tax bill. A non-tax bill can be introduced into either chamber of Congress initially; it could be introduced into the Senate…