Calamity, catastrophe, and tragedy are all slant rhymes (almost rhymes).
The rhyme scheme of "The Gresford Disaster" is AABCDD.
The synonym for "militia" is "army".
Some synonyms for "location" are "position", "point", "area", and "destiny"
Yea but it is an irregular rhyme
Troughts is not a word but if you mean "trough(s)" then "canal(s)", "channel(s)" , "ditch(s)", "or "gutter(s)" could work.
This is called an "eye rhyme" and sometimes one word will be deliberately mispronounced to make an actual rhyme, or for literary effect.
Yes, "two" and "do" rhyme. They both have the same long "oo" vowel sound at the end, creating a rhyme.
slant rhyme
Those two are an assonance, not a rhyme.
A ditch snitch.
No. Two, new, boo and poo rhyme.
The rhyme scheme of a stanza is typically denoted by assigning a letter to each rhyme. For example, if the stanza has an AABB rhyme scheme, it means the first two lines rhyme with each other and the second two lines rhyme with each other.