Yes.
There once was an overweight guy Who feasted on nothing but pie He said, "This society Prizes variety But I'll eat my pie till I die."
Pie Fly Guy Why Hi High Die Lie Lye My etc.
The queen baked a pie for the king in the nursery rhyme "Sing a Song of Sixpence." The maid in the nursery rhyme serves the pie to the king.
No. Fine and guy do not rhyme
greenfly
they rhyme as much as pie and pickle, which is to say... they don't
"Red" and "Request" do not rhyme. They have to have the same vowel sounds, such as, "Pie" or "Fly."
Yes. The words "fry" and "guy" rhyme. The word "guy" rhymes with "die", and "die" rhymes with "fry". Therefore, by the transitive property; "guy" rhymes with "fry".
because of the long 'eye' sound at the ending
Yes, Simple Simon did get a pie. In the traditional nursery rhyme, he encounters a pieman who is selling pies, and Simon expresses his desire to buy one. The rhyme humorously illustrates Simon's simple-mindedness and his interactions with the pieman. Ultimately, he does get a pie, though the rhyme doesn’t detail any further events.
24 blackbirds were baked in the pie. In the actual rhyme it is written in the old style of four-and-twenty.
"Sky" and "pie" are words that rhyme with "high" and can also have meanings related to smoke, such as in phrases like "smoke up to the sky" or "smoking a pie."