Three Blind Mice
Three Blind Mice.
No because when two thing are meant to rhyme one of the words cant have two words in it
You cant
its about the bridge usually when its up and down I don't really know how to say this but when people can pass on it and when people cant you know when it closes and opens that's why they think when it goes down its falling! that's what i think i might be wrong..
There are very few words that have no perfect rhymes in the English language. Examples include "orange," "silver," and "month." However, slant rhymes or near rhymes can often be used with these words in poetry or song lyrics.
roses are redvoilets are blueyou cant see me but i can see you
Sure! Here are a few suggestions: I can't wait for you to be my life The day you become my wife Together we'll live in harmony and strife
No rodents and most animals cant have acidic food
In "If I can't stop one heart from breaking" by Emily Dickinson, poetic devices used include imagery ("soft words and even", "sky of May"), metaphor ("murmur of a bee"), symbolism (heart breaking representing emotional pain), and personification (heart and bee are given human qualities).
Technically, it isn't one, all because of the simple fact that the word, "Rhyme" does not have any syllables. So there cant be any words that consists of that word to be one of syllables to fit in another word to rhyme with the basic term "Rhyme"ANS2:Eh, come again? I must say that it is difficult to understand what answer #1 is going on about."It is time to rhyme." meets the requirements that the sentence rhyme and that the last syllable (of the sentence) is "rhyme".
cant beleive up my sleeve deceive conceive retreive releive
because nobody has ever heard them rhyme before
The rhyme is... Red touches yellow - kill a fellow. Red touches black - venom lack.