The word 'assonance' entered English in the 1720s from French 'assonance,' which derives from Latin 'assonāre,' meaning 'to respond to' or 'to sound toward.' The Latin verb combines 'ad-' (to, toward — assimilated to 'as-' before the following 's') with 'sonāre' (to sound). Assonance is, at its root, one sound answering another — specifically, vowel sounds echoing across neighboring words.
As a literary term, assonance names the repetition of vowel sounds within words that are close together in a passage of prose or verse, without necessarily matching their consonant sounds. In the phrase 'the rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain,' the repeated long 'a' sound (rain, Spain, mainly, plain) creates a pattern of assonance that is one reason this sentence from 'My Fair Lady' is so memorable. Unlike full rhyme, which matches both vowel and consonant sounds at the end of words (rain/plain, Spain/main), assonance matches only the vowels, creating a subtler, more diffused music.
The term entered English specifically from the study of Romance-language poetry. In Spanish verse, 'rima asonante' (assonant rhyme) was the dominant rhyme system for centuries. The great medieval Spanish epic 'Cantar de Mio Cid' (c. 1200) and the vast tradition of Spanish romance ballads use assonant rhyme rather than full rhyme: only the vowel sounds of the last two syllables need to match. This gives the poet much greater freedom in word choice while still creating an audible pattern of sound correspondence. A Spanish ballad might rhyme words like 'noche' and 'hombre' — the vowel pattern 'o-e' matches, though the consonants
Old French epic poetry, including the 'Chanson de Roland' (c. 1100), similarly employed assonant rhyme. The 'laisse' — the stanza unit of Old French epic — was held together by assonance: all lines in a laisse shared the same final vowel sound, but the consonants varied freely. This system predated the development of strict full rhyme in French, which became standard only in the later medieval period under the influence of lyric poetry and fixed forms like the sonnet and the ballade.
English literary criticism adopted the term 'assonance' in the eighteenth century as scholars studied these Continental traditions. In English poetry itself, assonance had been used as a decorative device for centuries, though without a specific name. Keats was a master of assonance: 'Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness, / Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun' — the repeated short 'e' in 'mellow' and 'fruitfulness,' the long 'o' in 'close' and 'bosom,' the long 'u' in 'maturing' and 'sun' create overlapping patterns of vowel echo that give the lines their characteristic lush musicality.
Assonance differs from several related sound devices. Alliteration repeats the initial consonant sounds of words ('Peter Piper picked a peck'). Consonance repeats consonant sounds within or at the end of words ('blank and think,' 'odds and ends'). Full rhyme matches both the final vowel and consonant sounds ('moon/June,' 'love/dove'). Assonance occupies a middle ground
In modern popular music, assonance is one of the most important tools in a songwriter's arsenal. Rap and hip-hop, in particular, make extensive use of assonant patterns — matching vowel sounds across bars and lines to create complex internal rhyme schemes that would be impossible with strict full rhyme alone. Eminem's rhyming technique, for instance, relies heavily on assonance, stretching and bending vowel sounds so that words like 'orange' can participate in rhyme schemes through vowel matching rather than perfect consonant correspondence.
The technical study of assonance in linguistics and phonology connects to broader questions about how the human ear perceives sound patterns. Vowels carry more acoustic energy than consonants and are perceived at greater distances; they are the 'sonorous' core of syllables. When vowel sounds repeat across a passage of text, the pattern registers even in listeners who cannot name the technique. This subliminal musicality may be one reason why assonant prose and poetry feel
The word 'assonance' thus names a technique as old as human speech but formalized as a concept only in the study of medieval Romance poetry — a technique that has found new vitality in the rhyme schemes of contemporary popular music, where the vowel echo that troubadours and balladeers used eight centuries ago continues to shape how words sound when they are sung.