Today is the birthday of Carter Revard, Osage Indian, poet, and scholar of Old English. You can read some of his alliterative poetry here:

alliteration.net/poets/revard/

#alliterative #poetry #poetrycommunity #poetrylovers #alliterative #osage #native #indigenous #poet #alliterativeverse #oldenglish

The Winter, 2026 issue of Forgotten Ground Regained is now live on the theme:

PSALMS AND MEDITATIONS

#alliterative #poetry #poetrylovers #poetrycommunity #writingcommunity #psalms #meditations

alliteration.net/current-issue/

Announcing: The Fall, 2025 issue of Forgotten Ground Regained, featuring modern English poetry in Norse and Icelandic forms. 17 poems, 3 articles, with loads of info for the curious (& some great poems!)
alliteration.net/current-issue/ #alliterative #poetry #norsemythology

pleasently planted
popular petunias push
profoundly perfect

#alliterative #haiku

My #alliterative #poem "The Song of David and Abishag" just went live on The Brazen Head. Two vulnerabilities meet; power asymmetries echo across the centuries.
#poetry #biblical #verse #Christian #alliterativeverse
In the spirit of the season, here's the latest stanza of my translation from Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, a medieval adventure where most of the action takes place during twelve days of Christmas.
#alliteration #alliterative #verse #poem #poetry #poet #medieval #Christmas

Alliterative is a video channel about the etymology of the English language, made by the historian Dr Mark Sundaram. You can follow at:

➡️ @alliterative

If the videos aren't yet visible from your server, you can see them all at https://tilvids.com/a/alliterative/videos

The series' website is at https://www.alliterative.net

(If you followed this account before March 2022, please read this: https://mstdn.social/@feditips/107916542161347338)

#Alliterative #English #Language #History #Linguistics #Academic #MarkSundaram #Videos #PeerTube

Alliterative

Hello, my name is Mark Sundaram! I'm a university prof with a PhD in Medieval Studies. I use language, literature, and history to explore the web of connections in the world around us. Many of my videos start with a word as a jumping off point, with its history and etymology opening up a way to explore history and culture more widely. Others examine literary devices, cognitive science, myth, history of science, and other topics. The endless knot is a common visual motif of an interconnected knot with no beginning or end, found in many cultures around the world. My use of the symbol is a reference to the 14th c. poem "Sir Gawain & the Green Knight", where it describes the pentangle which Gawain has emblazoned on his shield as a symbol of the interconnectedness of things. Here it also gains significance from its comparison to the cognitive science hexagram which shows the interrelated nature of various fields in cognitive science. Be sure to visit my website at www.alliterative.net

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