If you really mean "rhyme Scheme" than the answer is a series of lines that follow a particular pattern, usually represented by the letters of the alphabet, such as:
AA, BB,A or A,B,C,A,B,C etc.
An example would be a Limerick, such as:
There once was a fellow from York (A)
who ate all of his food with a fork. (A)
He ate chicken and beans (B)
and meat, by all means (B)
but his friends classed him as a dork. (A)
The poem "Owl" by Tennyson does not follow a consistent rhyming scheme. It is written in free verse, which means it does not adhere to a specific pattern of rhyme or meter.
Modified Assured Carear Progression
no it does not but it could be an approximate rhyme meaning they sort of sound similar
They are end rhymes, meaning the end of the words rhymes ("ent") but they are not perfect rhymes, meaning the entire words do not rhyme.
Yes, but only as an "end rhyme", meaning the last part of the words rhyme, not the whole words.
They are "end rhymes," meaning that the ends of the words, in this case, "er," rhyme.
The rhyme scheme of a limerick is: A-A-B-B-A, meaning lines 1, 2 and 5 (A) rhyme and lines 3 and 4 (B) also rhyme.
The theatrical practices centred around the plays of William Shakespeare. Is sometimes used loosely to refer to the extremely creative and vibrant theatre community in London in Shakespeare's time.
They are end rhymes, meaning the last letters (in this case, "on") rhyme, but they are not exact rhymes.
"Rainbow" and "indigo" are end rhymes, meaning only the end syllables of the words rhyme (in this case, "bow" and "go" rhyme).
The poem "The Sea" does not have a consistent rhyme scheme as it is a free verse poem, meaning it does not follow a particular pattern of rhyme or meter.
serene