Not if pronounced correctly. Gust rhymes with must, and Gus rhymes with muss and fuss.
It's not a perfect rhyme, but it is a "close rhyme". A perfect rhyme would be "us" and "muss".
No. To have a rhyme, the beginning consonants of the word MUST be different.
No. A rhyme must contain the same ending sound in both words.
The statement "Rhyme must always occur at the end of a line" is not true. Rhyme can occur at the end of lines (end rhyme) or within a single line (internal rhyme). Rhyme can also be less strict, such as slant rhyme or eye rhyme.
False. A poem can have internal rhyme (rhyme within a line) without necessarily following a structured rhyme scheme. Internal rhyme adds to the musicality and flow of a poem, but it is not a requirement for a specific rhyme scheme.
No, they don't rhyme. People may think they rhyme because they end in ch, but they don't rhyme. To have words rhyme, they must have similar sounds, not just be spelled similarly. ex. lunch rhymes with punch much rhymes with such
In prose must words rhyme?
The possessive form for the proper noun Gus is Gus's.Example: We're invited to Gus's backyard barbecue.
simple.... you must divide by zero to find it, though.
Re- is only a prefix, something separate must be put in place to rhyme with it such as see or be. Married is the real word you should look for a rhyme for. Words that rhyme with married are buried, carried, or varied.
The plural form of Gus is Gus's.
Gus Hansen goes by Gattling Gus, The Poker Tramp, Gamblin' Gus, Mad Gus, and The Great Dane.