The vocal asonante in e--e here commences, and continues to the end of the Sixteenth Scene.
The metre of this and the following scene is the asonante in a--e.
The metre reverts here again to the asonante form, which is kept up for the remainder of this act.
But the rhyme is as remarkable as the verse and the translation; not that you have made the asonante as perceptible to the English ear as it is to the Spanish; our cumbersome consonants make that impossible.
The asonante changes here into five-lined stanzas in ordinary rhyme.
The asonante in e-e, recommences here, and continues until the entry of Chrysanthus.
In the whole of this scene the asonantevowels are a-e, or their equivalents.
In the second scene the asonanteis in a-e, as in "scAttEr", etc.
The metre changes to the asonante in a-e for the remainder of this Act.
The metre changes to the double asonante in e-e, which continues to the end of the drama.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "asonante" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.