no, it dose not rhyme
if you look at it in a different perspectives should rhyme as they both end in ''et''words that rhyme WITH regret and met are:setletbetwetyetpetetc (you know what i mean!)
Yes.
no
no.
No.
Wives.
The rhyme scheme of the poem "An Irish Airman Foresees His Death" by W.B. Yeats is irregular, with some rhymed couplets and alternating rhyme patterns throughout. The lack of a consistent rhyme scheme reflects the speaker's contemplative and introspective tone as he reflects on his impending death.
The poem "Death, be not proud" by John Donne has a rhyme scheme of ABBA ABBA CDC DCD using the Petrarchan or Italian sonnet form. The rhyme scheme helps structure the poem's exploration of death and its defiance in the face of mortality.
Absolute rhyme is a pair of words that form a perfect rhyme. For example, fly and sky, death and meth, hat and scat, and last but not least, poor and door.
See the Related Link below.
Done to death Don't suck my breathe
This is what they call a leading question. Most people would say Ring a ring of roses but the rhyme existed long after the black death 'died' out and just refers to people dying from sneezing, which isn't linked to the black death at all.