Well, "waiting" and "eating" partially rhyme. The ing sound is repeated, but for a perfect rhyme, you also need the "a" or the "e" sound. Some words that rhyme with eating more perfectly follow:
beating
cheating
greeting
heating
meeting
seating
sleeting
Waiting in Rhyme - 2009 V is rated/received certificates of: UK:PG
The rhyme scheme used in the phrase "waiting for spring" is A-B-C-B.
Cucumber
The queen is eating bread and honey in the parlor in the nursery rhyme "Sing a Song of Sixpence."
spoon tune
Phrases are said to rhyme if they have the same sound at the end of the last word, and similar syllabic rhythm. Some phrase that would rhyme with "catch you" are: next to, bat shoe, hatch new, flat screw.
beer
you can eat on the go rather then waiting in a line
Yes, it is simply waiting and eating a proper diet.
The nursery rhyme with the initials LLFAH is "Little Miss Muffet." It tells the story of a young girl who sits on a tuffet, eating her curds and whey, and is frightened by a spider.
ner rhyme, but not rhyme ner rhyme, but not rhyme ner rhyme, but not rhyme
While many people believe that it was curds and whey that Little Miss Muffet was eating during the nursery rhyme this is actually a misunderstanding. The original wording of the rhyme tells us that the aforementioned Miss Muffet was actually eating turds and hay. Due to the accents of people over time the rhyme slowly mutated to say curds and whey. There is also another theory that curds is actually spelt "kurds", it is believed that the Turkish and Iraqi governments originally wrote the rhyme as a piece of propaganda against the Kurds, it is said that the rhyme infers the weakness of the Kurdish people.