I believe the city would be Duluth. Not a city but a good rhyme would be in her vermouth.
Duluth?
Duluth
It's a slant rhyme, meaning it's close but not quite. Much ends with -uch, where lunch ends with -unch. It's as simple as that.
mean it, seen it, and some other stuff that ends with it. that's all i think can rhyme with disagreement
When referring to internal rhyming and external rhyming in poetry, internal rhyme is rhyming within a line; esternal rhyming is when the ends of multiple lines rhyme with each other.
first names which ends with an s:RossTessCrisKaris
An interrogative sentence ends with a question mark (?).dose indeed?
Duluth
No, "for" and "yours" do not rhyme because they end with different sounds. "For" ends with the "or" sound, while "yours" ends with the "urs" sound.
No, "together" and "there" do not rhyme. "Together" ends with "er" sound, while "there" ends with "air" sound.
No. Bella ends in 'ella' and Arizona ends in 'ona'. It's more like a half rhyme.
Yes, "you" and "school" do not rhyme. The pronunciation of "you" ends with a "oo" sound, while "school" ends with an "ul" sound.
No, "super" and "copper" do not rhyme. "Super" ends with the sound /ər/, while "copper" ends with the sound /ər/.
No, "memories" and "these" do not rhyme. "Memories" ends with the sound "ēz" while "these" ends with the sound "ēz".
slant rhyme
No.
NO. The word known ends with n and the word home ends with e. Close though.
The rhyme scheme in "Where the Sidewalk Ends" by Shel Silverstein is AABB, meaning that the first two lines rhyme with each other and the second two lines rhyme with each other.
AB CDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ1234567890