a couplet
A rhyming phrase for two dangers would be double trouble.
no. the "a" sound is different in the two words
Elixir - word fixer
bassist is probably the only two syllable word that rhymes with racist
Reeky Creek =]
rhyming couplet
A couplet.
It's fairly easy, you follow an AABB pattern with the first two lines rhyming and the last two lines rhyming also.
A pair of rhyming lines in a row is called a couplet.
Couplets
A couplet uses end rhyme, which means the rhyme occurs at the end of the lines. In a couplet, two consecutive lines rhyme with each other.
the lines are divided into two quatrains and two rhyming couplets
If the two lines that are being transversed are parallel, then the consecutive interior angles are equal to 180 degrees.
The most basic pattern is a "quatrain" which consists of four lines with two rhyming syllables at the end, and the (approximately) same number of syllables in the lines. Roses are red And Violets are blue Sugar is sweet And so are you But there's actually lots of different rhyming patterns that do this, such that rhyming syllables is what usually makes poetry considered poetry, and gives it its musicality. Sonnets follow a rhyming pattern of ten lines with ten syllables each, of two quatrains, and a closing rhyme in the last two.
No, two lines would not be parallel if the consecutive interior angles measured 108 degrees and 74 degrees. Consecutive interior angles on parallel lines are always congruent, meaning they have the same measure. Therefore, if the consecutive interior angles have different measures, the lines cannot be parallel.
These three lines Could have been rhyming But they would not have answered your question. The above three lines do, though.
It uses rhyming pairs of lines.