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Expand? | Letters | Answer | Clue | |||||
99% | 12 | Exact Match! | ||||||
noun • use of the same consonant at the beginning of each stressed syllable in a line of verse | ||||||||
40% | 6 | Setting for the Labours of Hercules | ||||||
noun • a region of ancient Greece on the north coast of the Peloponnese | ||||||||
40% | 8 | Labours to achieve | ||||||
No meanings yet for this word...
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Literary Device Used In Loves Labours Lost Crossword Clue
There is 1 exact and 139 possible answers.
We've checked our database and believe the answer is
ALLITERATION which was last seen in the Telegraph Cross Atlantic crossword.
Check other possible answers below.
Check other possible answers below.
We think the answer to this crossword clue is:
ALLITERATION
Updated: October 12, 2023
Best Possible Answers
Users Also Searched For These Clues...
We think you're currently doing a Telegraph Cross Atlantic crossword, and other users also searched for these clues:
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Clue Last Found In...
Source | #Number | Answer |
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Telegraph Cross Atlantic07 Aug 2023 | Down 5 | |
This clue was last seen in the publications above.
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Similar Clues
Clue | Source | |
---|---|---|
1 | "He loves me, he loves me not" flower part
New York Times -
15 Sep 2014 | New York Times / 15 Sep 2014 |
2 | Begin a game of "She loves me, she loves me not ..."?
New York Times -
02 Sep 2012 | New York Times / 02 Sep 2012 |
3 | He loves, she loves, or it loves: Lat.
New York Times -
19 Feb 2019 | New York Times / 19 Feb 2019 |
4 | Labours to achieve | |
5 | One unsatisfied with a "She loves me, she loves me not" result?
New York Times -
09 Mar 2014 | New York Times / 09 Mar 2014 |
6 | Preceder of "loves me" and "loves me not"
New York Times -
27 Apr 2015 | New York Times / 27 Apr 2015 |
7 | Setting for the Labours of Hercules |
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Fe, fi, fo, fum, e.g.
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Ming (or Maoist) measure in metamorphosis, maybe
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What 17-, 33-, 47- and 66-Across exhibit, despite appearances to the contrary
Poetic rhyming device using words with the same initial letter
Feature of Love's Labour's Lost nothing but repetition
Make a mountain out of a molehill, for instance — I tear into all (anag)
Literary technique used by James Joyce, Graham Greene and Daniel Defoe?
Repetition of sounds in a sentence
Desperate Dan or Mickey Mouse, say