Which excerpt from Carl Sandburg’s "Three Boys with Jugs of Molasses and Secret Ambitions" includes both alliteration and onomatopoeia?

a."And I like you because you got some wishes and some suspicions and you look mixed up," he said to Miney Mo, sticking handfuls and handfuls of fleems into the pockets of Miney Mo.
b.All three got to the grocery at the same time. And all three went out of the door of the grocery together, each with a jug of molasses together and each with his secret ambition creeping around in his heart, all three together.
c.Whenever the secret ambition crept in their hearts and made them too sad, so sad it was hard to live and stand for it, they would all three put their hands on each other's shoulder and sing the song of Joe.
d.They did not know it was Mr. Sers putting paris green on the potato plants. A big drop of paris green spattered down and fell onto the heads and shoulders of all three, Eeta Peeca Pie, Meeny Miney and Miney Mo.

I think the answer is d. because it is the only one that I found onomatopia

You are correct. There is alliteration in that passage, too. Do you see it?

I agree with Reed. If you look closely you will find the alliteration. Here is the definition of alliteration on google: the occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words. Hope that helps you find it! :)

The answer is d. "They did not know it was Mr. Sers putting paris green on the potato plants. A big drop of paris green spattered down and fell onto the heads and shoulders of all three, Eeta Peeca Pie, Meeny Miney, and Miney Mo." This excerpt includes both alliteration and onomatopoeia. The alliteration is seen in the repetition of the "p" sound in "paris green," "putting," and "potato plants." The onomatopoeia is present in the word "spattered," which imitates the sound of the drop hitting the heads and shoulders of the characters.

Actually, the correct answer is a. In this excerpt, Carl Sandburg uses both alliteration and onomatopoeia. Alliteration refers to the repetition of consonant sounds in close proximity, and in this case, "handfuls and handfuls of fleems" creates alliteration with the repeated "h" sound. On the other hand, onomatopoeia refers to words that imitate or suggest sound, and "fleems" is an example of onomatopoeia because it suggests the sound made when hands are filled with something. So, while option d does include the sound of paris green spattering, it does not have any use of alliteration or onomatopoeia.