The phrase does not matter--you focus on the last word to rhyme, then pick one that relates well to the context and meaning of the rhyme or poem. So, focusing on fowl you have these choices:
Hi! I wanted to ask a question that would really make me happy if you answered! On the miniclip.com game called Fowl Words, you can enter a password and I would like to know what that password is. So the question is, Do you know the password to the game Fowl Words? If you can email me at snrrox@hotmail.com, that would be great! Bye!
If you are writing a poem and trying to rhyme 'make sense' with something then it would be perfectly fine to just use rhyme for 'sense'. here are some examples:hencepencedenseagainstdefensefencetenserentsgentsdentsSpenseKent'stentsdispensewhenceventscents
It is about Artemis Fowl, a teenage criminal who captures a fairy to make a lot of money.
most of the poems make sense but not all poems rhyme
Just before you hit the hay!
Yes, of course they rhyme - BECAUSE they are the same! But I would think that it takes the creativity out of a poem to use the same word twice just to make it rhyme,don't you?
make it rhyme
No.
No, the words "be" and "worry" don't rhyme by themselves, since they have a different number of syllables. Only the ends of the words rhyme. To make a better rhyme you would have to add something before the bee that gave it another syllable, in a similar cadence. For instance "Furby" would rhyme with Worry" a little better. It still isn't a perfect rhyme though... it has two syllables, but has a B sound instead of a R sound. Here are some things that rhyme better with worry: curry furry hurry jury slurry
No, if the 17 year old isn't where their parents expect them to be, they are a runaway.
All poems don't rhyme because its an expressing of feelings it doesn't have to rhyme it should only make sense
A half rhyme, which is also sometimes called a slant rhyme, near-rhyme, or lazy rhyme, is a rhyme formed by words that make similar but not identical sounds.