Couplets traditionally rhyme, with two lines that form a pair. Repeating the same word in both lines would not be characteristic of a traditional couplet.
Yes, of course they rhyme - BECAUSE they are the same! But I would think that it takes the creativity out of a poem to use the same word twice just to make it rhyme,don't you?
The end rhyme scheme for Andrew Marvell's "To His Coy Mistress" is AABBCC.
Marvell uses rhyming couplets: AA,BB,CC,DD,EE,FF... my dad just bought a car. it can go really far.
leather, teather, heather. you could just rhyme with the toghether in altogether.
Phonetically it can and therefore for poems and rhymes you could "just" get away with it
it kind of seems to rhyme but im not positive at all but just listen to the words ( KIELE'S.............. TREES) so it could be a yes or no
No, but there are a few poetic devices found in Limericks like meter, rhyme scheme, rhyming couplets, and those are just some. Those should be the basic poetic devices in most/all limericks. Your Welcome ( o ) ( o ) \ >< / @@@@@
Yes, just as there doesn't have to be rhyme in poetry.
It's just called 'rhyme'. You could certainly just call it 'rime'. But if you want to specify that the rime comes at the end of lines (rather than in the middle (internal rime) or from middle to end (leonine rime)) - use the term 'endrime'.
They never repeat in any pattern. If they never repeated, you could have at most 10 digits after the decimal point and therefore the decimal representation would be terminating.
Answer:The poem does not rhyme. Answer:Wrong every poem has a rhyme scheme even if it is just A-Z.
No, heaven does not rhyme with forgiven they are just similarly sounding words.