"My daughter's laughter is sunshine to my heart" is an example of a metaphor.
The noun 'laughter' is an uncountable noun. Units of laughter are expressed in amounts such as some laughter, a lot of laughter, much laughter, etc.
That sweet, little girl is the apple of her grandfather's eye. She criticizes her son all the time, but her daughter is the apple of her eye.
objectives of laughter club
I'm doubtful that laughter is healthy by definition; there is 'gallows laughter', and laughter that is derisive and mean-spirited. But the physiological activity of laughter is beneficial to our bodies, and in the right context it is emotionally beneficial as well.
eye rhyme
eye rhyme
No they look alike but sound differently. Like rhyming "tough" with "bough" or "laughter" with "daughter". Usually such words used to rhyme but pronounciations have changed the sound of one of the words, while spelling has remained constant. (E.g. "daughter" used to sound like "laughter")
This is called an "eye rhyme" and sometimes one word will be deliberately mispronounced to make an actual rhyme, or for literary effect.
He received a call / about a bill / before he fell. - APEX
No, laughter and ladder do not rhyme because they do not share the same ending sound. "Laughter" ends with "-ter" while "ladder" ends with "-der".
"My daughter's laughter is sunshine to my heart" is an example of a metaphor.
an imperfect rhyme
The term you are referring to is "visual rhyme." Visual rhymes occur when words look similar but do not sound the same.
"Move" and "love" form an eye rhyme in "A Girl in Love."
Some words that rhyme with "after shocks" are "block," "clocks," and "fox."
No, "eye" and "night" do not rhyme. Rhymes are words that have similar ending sounds, and in this case, the sounds in "eye" and "night" are not the same.