Scythe assonates with sky: they have the same vowel sound.
Hythe rimes with scythe; dry with sky.
No.
no
SKy
The rhyme scheme in "The Man Against the Sky" by Edwin Arlington Robinson is ABAB CDCD EFEF GHGH IJIJ.
"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."
Scythe is Ogama
Yes. High will rhyme with any word that ends in an "eye (i)" sound. High, sky, lie, fry, pie, cry, sigh, etc.
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.
Words that rhyme with dying include:buyingcryingdefyingdignifyingdryingedifyingflyingfryinglyingmesmerizingplyingpryingsatisfyingsighingsignifyingspyingtryingvyingTrying
The farmer used the scythe to cut the grain. Death carries a scythe.
No, behind does not rhyme (sound similar) with fly. Behind would rhyme with kind, blind... fly rhymes with sky, shy, dry, high, bye, pie...
Phonetically , yes, but considering spelling, the endings are different.