No. A rhyme needs to have the same ending sound like blue and shoe or steak and fake.
no
"Who did not get up until nine or ten?" is a line from the nursery rhyme "Lazy Mary." The rhyme describes Mary's reluctance to get out of bed and start her day.
External rhyme is rhyme that happens on the "outside" of the poem. In other words, the words at the end of the lines rhyme.
who wrote ten little monkeys
The rhyme scheme of "Ten Little Indians" is AABBCCDD. Each stanza consists of two couplets followed by a rhyming quatrain.
tarty collie charlie
No, if you say it out loud does it sound like it rhymes?
Technically no--for one of two reasons: 1) to "rhyme," two words must have the same "rhyme sound," preceded by a different "consonantal sound" and 2) the accent must be on the same syllable. (Note: the different preceding consonantal sound in the two words are "t" in "ten" and "c" in "-cent.") The rhyme sound in "ten" is "-en" and in "per-cent" is "-ent." "-en and "-ent" clearly are different rhyme sounds because of the "t" in "-ent." In pronouncing "percent," the accented syllable is arguably the second syllable "-cent" and thus that part of the definition of a rhyme is met, but the rhyme still fails because of the first part of the definition of a rhyme. See http://www.wikirhymer.com/Rhyme+Definition for further information.
ben ken ten pen men den
Something that sounds the same... For example- HOT rhymes with DOT. CROP rhymes with STOP. TEN rhymes with PEN. Got it???
Some examples are:-HadSadMadTadCadLadBadRadCladPlaid (the word is pronounced 'plad')
"Three score and ten" in the nursery rhyme "The Four and Twenty Blackbirds" refers to the number 70. In the context of the rhyme, it signifies the age of the "old woman" who was baking the pie with the blackbirds in it.