Maybe!
No, internal rhyme involves rhyming words within the same line of poetry, which may not always be perfect rhymes. Internal rhyme can also involve slant rhymes or near rhymes.
When referring to internal rhyming and external rhyming in poetry, internal rhyme is rhyming within a line; esternal rhyming is when the ends of multiple lines rhyme with each other.
It is a near rhyme, but not a perfect rhyme.
...the rhyming words are not at the end of the line/s.
No, "pen" and "bed" are not an approximate rhyme. An approximate rhyme is when words have a similar ending sound but are not a perfect match, such as "pen" and "pain."
There are no perfect rhymes for lozenge in the English language. According to the Oxford Rhyming Dictionary, orange does.
Because that make it sound better but you dont always have to rhyme
First of all i believe the word "and" in the question above is meant to be "an". Second this sentence could be either really, for assonance is the repetition of a sound or vowel in non-rhyming stressed syllables. On the other hand an internal rhyme is a rhyme involving a word in the middle of a line that rhymes with another word in the same line, and can have more than two rhyming words. It is unlike a usual rhyme that's rhyming words are both at the end of the line. So the sentence "The snake named Jake is often late." would be considered an internal rhyme.
internal rhyming
Yes, Lucy and lazy do not rhyme. Rhyming words have similar sounds at the end of the word, while Lucy and lazy have different ending sounds.
According to the Write Express Free Online Rhyming Dictionary (see link at bottom), a double rhyme of awkwardly is "thirdly." (The only listed word.) However, this is not a perfect rhyme. If you want a perfect rhyme, there are none (according to rhymer.com and RhymeZone.com) To access the rhyming dictionary: http://www.rhymer.com/ To access the page with awkwardly: http://www.rhymer.com/RhymingDictionaryDouble/awkwardly.html
Internal rhyme.
Yes, the poem "Spring and Fall" by Gerard Manley Hopkins contains internal rhyming. Hopkins uses techniques such as alliteration, consonance, and assonance to create internal rhyme within the lines of the poem, contributing to its musicality and poetic effect.