Yes, because since they both have "side" in it then they rime.
"I want to outside,
because there's a bright side!"
"A bright sunrise" could rhyme with "outside" and reference a good morning.
Dark side Outside (Backside?) Power Ride Ride
No.
bright
no. life rhymes with knife, sife, bife, jife, hife, but not bright. if it did rhyme, it would have to be brife. :3 your welcome :3
Bright light.
bike rhymes with alike
External rhyme is rhyme that happens on the "outside" of the poem. In other words, the words at the end of the lines rhyme.
She sings in the evening light, so bright. The cat sat on the mat, so fat. The first pair of lines demonstrates slant rhyme as "bright" and "light" have similar ending sounds but do not perfectly rhyme.
Bright Plight Clight ...............
yuletide
"It is as bright as it could" is not a complete sentence. To make it a complete sentence, it would have to say "It is as bright as it could be". Furthermore, it is very difficult to rhyme with an entire sentence, and usually isn't necessary. Usually it is only necessary to rhyme with the last word in the sentence.