Maybe something like this:
Life
is rife with strife
on the edge of a knife
I'd rather find a wife
or learn to play the fife.
... obviously that is a bit overdone, but those are some rhymes you could use with that exact word, and you can find rhymes for almost anything that you want to say. Sometimes it is good to decide what you want to say about life and then come up with some rhymes that will fit into the story.
no
The rhyme scheme in "A Psalm of Life" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is ABABCC. The rhyme scheme in "Auspex" by Henry Gifford is AABBCCDD.
REGULAR
Knife, Wife
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
The rhyme scheme of "A Psalm of Life" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is predominantly ABAB. This means that every four lines follow a pattern where the first and third lines rhyme with each other, and the second and fourth lines rhyme with each other.
The rhyme scheme of "What is our life" by Sir Walter Raleigh is AABBCCDD. Each stanza consists of alternating rhyming couplets.
The words "life" and "sight" do not rhyme. Please see the related questions below for "What rhymes with life?" and "What rhymes with sight?"
"It's a sailors life for ME."
It has a regular rhyme schemeEach verse follows a regular rhyme schemeAll literary analyses and interpretations are equally valid and no judgment can be made about the value of any.Each verse follows a regular rhyme schemeApex =)
Wife, life, and strife all rhyme with withknife.
Oath & Both