
Adverbial Alliteration
Advisedly, we’re normally explanatorily told not to
write clichéd adverbial conquests, but to eschew such modifications
faithfully as frivolously fast fingers freely flow creatively composing
craftily constructed compositions, purportedly passing on poorly
penned prepositional phrases padded with mystery.
Reality rudely reeks seeking adjunct, conjunct, disjunct, or just plain junk.
To prepare perfectly pedestrian, speciously deceptive poems and prose,
paint in some opposition of affirmation.
Look both ways crossing artful Grammar Ave. Mind the gaps that set the traps.
Poor adverbs… They get such a bad rap!
This was quite the tongue-twister to read and a whole lotta fun!
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Thanks, Dale. I am pleased that you enjoyed it. I think writing like that changes my brain. 🙂
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I really did. It’s great to work that brain 😉
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Scintillatingly superb!
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Thank you. Peter.
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Perfectly penned – and most certainly not pedestrian! Enjoyed this a lot.😊
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Thank you. Glad you enjoyed it.
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You missed one, Bill. “Padded with Perplexity”. Other than that you get A+/-
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So I did. Thanks for the help, Jim.
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