Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Lay of the Children of Húrin (c. 1918–1925), an unfinished poetic version of the story of Túrin, going as far as Túrin's sojourn in Nargothrond.It exists in two versions, both incomplete; the first being 2276 lines long, the second containing only 745 alliterating lines, corresponding to the first 435 lines of the first version.
There are several concepts to which the term alliteration is sometimes applied: . Literary or poetic alliteration is often described as the repetition of identical initial consonant sounds in successive or closely associated syllables within a group of words.
Location of Warren County in Illinois. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Warren County, Illinois. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Warren County, Illinois, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for ...
Warren is a village in Jo Daviess County, Illinois, United States. The population was 1,323 at the 2020 census, [ 3 ] down from 1,428 at the 2010 census. Warren was named after Warren Burnett, the first male child born at the site.
Warren Township is a township in Lake County, Illinois, USA. As of the 2020 census, its population was 65,883. [1] The cities of Gurnee, Park City, and Grayslake lie within its borders. The township was established in 1850 by settlers who came from the town of Warren, New York.
However, in traditional Somali alliterative verse, alliterating consonants are always word-initial, and the same alliterating consonant must carry through across multiple successive lines within a poem. [11] In Mongol alliterative verse, individual lines are also phrases, with strongest stress on the first word of the phrase. [55]
The Warren Commercial Historic District is a historic commercial district located in Warren, Illinois. The district encompasses the town's central business district and includes 34 contributing buildings and a water tower .
The rules by which alliterative verse was composed in Middle English are unclear and have been the subject of much debate. No metrical rules were written down at the time, and their details were quickly forgotten once the form died out: Robert Crowley, in his 1550 printing of Piers Plowman, simply stated that each line had "thre wordes at the least [...] whiche beginne with some one letter ...