No.
Only if you have an accent. If you pronouce them correctly then they do not rhyme.
No. A rhyme needs to have the same ending sounds such as talk and walk or spot and forgot.
a walkI like to take a walk in the evening.chalkMy teachers write with chalk.
Not exactly. Please see the related questions below for "What rhymes with walk?" and "What rhymes with rock?"
A phrase using words that begin with the same sound is an example of alliteration.
Cross Talk
Dick Punnett has written: 'Talk-along--help dress Priscilla' -- subject(s): Fiction, Gorilla, Literary recreations, Clothing and dress, Stories in rhyme 'Does Anyone Have a Spare Bear? (Double-Rhyme Books)' 'Peek-A-Boo Sue (Double-Rhyme Books)' 'Help Dress Priscilla' 'Thrills, chills & spills' -- subject(s): History, Aeronautics, Airports 'Talk along--help Jumbo escape' -- subject(s): Stories in rhyme, Elephants, Fiction 'Racing on the rim' -- subject(s): Automobile racing, History 'Count the Possums' 'Double-rhyme--peek-a-boo Sue' -- subject(s): Fiction, Stories in rhyme, Zoos, Kangaroos
There are a great many ways in which you could interrupt a person while they talk. You could talk over them.
Yes, but without being offensive. Germans prefer not to talk about Hitler since they feel the generations before them were at fault for the Nazis and not the younger generations.
Internal rhyme.
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