(10 points) Answer ASAP-!!
Which of the following lines from Alfred Lord Tennyson's "The Brook" demonstrates alliteration?

And out again I curve and flow/To join the brimming river
I move the sweet forget-me-nots/That grow for happy lovers.
And sparkle out among the fern/To bicker down a valley.
I bubble into eddying bays/I babble on the pebbles.

I think It's D, but I need someone to reassure me :))

Respuesta :

Answer:

You're correct. Your answer will be D.

Answer:

Option D. The line from Alfred Lord Tennyson's "The Brook" that demonstrates alliteration is the following: "I bubble into eddying bays/I babble on the pebbles."

Explanation:

Alliteration is a literary device in which words that have the same first consonant sound are put together in the same line or phrase. The term comes from the Latin word "Latira" which means "letters of the alphabet".

Out of all the lines presented at the question, option D is the one that demonstrates an alliteration as it uses words starting with the consonant b throughout the line.