This poem by Edward Lear may be of some help:
I
Said the Table to the Chair,
'You can hardly be aware,
'How I suffer from the heat,
'And from chilblains on my feet!
'If we took a little walk,
'We might have a little talk!
'Pray let us take the air!'
Said the Table to the Chair.
II
Said the Chair to the table,
'Now you know we are not able!
'How foolishly you talk,
'When you know we cannot walk!'
Said the Table with a sigh,
'It can do no harm to try,
'I've as many legs as you,
'Why can't we walk on two?'
III
So they both went slowly down,
And walked about the town
With a cheerful bumpy sound,
As they toddled round and round.
And everybody cried,
As they hastened to the side,
'See! the Table and the Chair
'Have come out to take the air!'
IV
But in going down an alley,
To a castle in a valley,
They completely lost their way,
And wandered all the day,
Till, to see them safetly back,
They paid a Ducky-quack,
And a Beetle, and a Mouse,
Who took them to their house.
V
Then they whispered to each other,
'O delightful little brother!
'What a lovely walk we've taken!
'Let us dine on Beans and Bacon!'
So the Ducky and the leetle
Browny-Mousy and the Beetle
Dined and danced upon their heads
Till they toddled to their beds.
I Have Looked On A Load Of Rhyming Websites And They All Said Nothing Rhymes With It.
Liam is acting very impolite today, which is unlike him,' said the teacher.
Whirlpool(if said right). That's all I can think of.
after i said my sentence the teacher said it was splendid
Johannes Brahms said: "It is not difficult to compose. But it is terribly difficult to let the extraneous notes fall under the table".
The boy only left one sprout on his plate after he ate his Christmas dinner. The nurseryman said to the customer, don't worry Sir, that plant will soon sprout. The rhyming slang for a Brussels sprout is Boy scout.
Cockney Rhyming Slang is prevalent in dialects of English from the East End of London. Cockney Rhyming Slang is said to have originated in the market place so vendors could communicate to each other without the customers knowing what they were saying. Others believe it originated in prisons so inmates could talk to each other without the guards knowing what they said.
All four sat down at the poker table, then George picked up the deck, shuffled, and said: "Well gentlemen, shall we commence?".
"I said to him" is a grammatically correct sentence fragment since "said" is still waiting for its direct object. You said what to him? "I said "to him". would be a grammatically correct sentence.
"My Uncle John said" is not a complete sentence. It doesn't tell us WHAT he said.
He pardoned him for the sin his friend committed. Here pardon is the act to forgiving someone.
The purple elephant danced gracefully on the rainbow clouds.