bow

/bəʊ/noun
Early Childhood
1

A weapon made of a curved piece of wood or other flexible material whose ends are connected by a string, used for shooting arrows.

2

A curved bend in a rod or planar surface, or in a linear formation such as a river (see oxbow).

3

A rod with horsehair (or an artificial substitute) stretched between the ends, used for playing various stringed musical instruments.

4

A stringed instrument (chordophone), consisting of a stick with a single taut cord stretched between the ends, most often played by plucking.

5

A type of knot with two loops, used to tie together two cords such as shoelaces or apron strings, and frequently used as decoration, such as in gift-wrapping.

6

Anything bent or curved, such as a rainbow.

7

The U-shaped piece which goes around the neck of an ox and fastens it to the yoke.

8

Either of the arms of a pair of spectacles, running from the side of the lens to behind the wearer's ear.

9

Any instrument consisting of an elastic rod, with ends connected by a string, employed for giving reciprocating motion to a drill, or for preparing and arranging hair, fur, etc., used by hatters.

10

A crude sort of quadrant formerly used for taking the sun's altitude at sea.

Sound Patterns & Rhymes

Rhymes

Words that share the same ending sound pattern

Alliteration

Words starting with the same consonant sound — used in poetry and prose to create rhythm, emphasis, and memorable phrasing (e.g. “Peter Piper picked”)

Assonance

Words sharing similar vowel sounds regardless of starting letter — creates internal melody in writing

Consonance

Words sharing similar consonant sound patterns — adds texture and cohesion to writing