They do not rhyme. They don't rhyme because they don't sound alike, and the fact that they don't have the same last two letters.
Yes, "mouth" and "house" rhyme because they share the same "-ow" sound at the end.
no but it rhymes with stout............if that helps ;]
No, "south" and "allowed" do not rhyme. "South" rhymes with words like "mouth" and "drouth," while "allowed" rhymes with words like "loud" and "proud."
Not necessarily. Different languages have different phonetic systems and rules for rhyming, so words that rhyme in one language may not rhyme in another. Additionally, languages may have different sounds that are associated with rhyming.
Some one syllable words that rhyme with scrunch are brunch, bunch, crunch, hunch, lunch, munch, punch.Some two syllable words that rhyme with scrunch are fruit punch, milk punch.Some three syllable words that rhyme with scrunch are center punch, credit crunch, fish house punch, knockout punch.
This is the type of end rhyme referred to as "true rhyme."
no but it rhymes with stout............if that helps ;]
No.
No
No it don you sILLY
No.
No, because youth is pronounced 'yooth', As for south and mouth; pronounced as they look.
many like spout,mouth,cloud...AnswerSpoutLoutGroutGoutRoutBoutAboutFloutDevoutTroutSurtout (a type of jacket or waistcoat)CloutDoubtUmlautI disagree with the above: mouth and cloud do not rhyme with out. The ending has to be the sound of OUT or OWT, or AUT in umlaut.
Cheek, Speak (mouth on the face)
no the end sound of the two words don't sound the same, very little rhymes with mouth, other than south or other words which finish in mouth
The internal near rhyme in "16 steps to the ice house" is the repetition of the "i" sound in the words "steps" and "ice." This creates a subtle and internal rhyme scheme within the title.
Not necessarily. Different languages have different phonetic systems and rules for rhyming, so words that rhyme in one language may not rhyme in another. Additionally, languages may have different sounds that are associated with rhyming.
Washington washed a ton of washing