Pleasure and treasure
See the link for information, and a contrast with Feminine Rhyme.
No. When a word has an unstressed final syllable, you have to rhyme the stressed syllable as well. This is called a feminine rhyme. You might rhyme lieutenant with pennant.
Some examples of feminine rhyme in the poem "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe are: "dreary" and "weary" "token" and "spoken" "burden" and "word in" "betook" and "forsook"
No. Hear and near are not an example of slant rhyme.
Olaf and pilaf is one example of half rhyme.
An example of rhyme would be "your tryin to be cool, you look like a fool'' from Avril Lavignes Complicated.
Yes, "cloth" and "wash" is an example of half rhyme, also known as slant rhyme. While they do not have the same ending sound, the vowel sounds are similar enough to create a partial rhyme.
No.
An example of exact rhyme is "cat" and "hat" where both words end with the same sound "-at".
Aviatrix. it comes from the Latin and is approximately- Birdwoman. pronounced correctly to rhyme with Have- I- a- Trix, not Ave a Trix!
One example of a rhyme with the last syllable "pany" is "alacrity."
This is an example of an eye rhyme, where words look like they should rhyme due to their spelling but are pronounced differently.