middle fiddle
middle fiddle
No. A rhyme must contain the same ending sound in both words.
In prose must words rhyme?
Spare Hare
finer liner
brief grief
No, they don't rhyme. People may think they rhyme because they end in ch, but they don't rhyme. To have words rhyme, they must have similar sounds, not just be spelled similarly. ex. lunch rhymes with punch much rhymes with such
Re- is only a prefix, something separate must be put in place to rhyme with it such as see or be. Married is the real word you should look for a rhyme for. Words that rhyme with married are buried, carried, or varied.
No, the words "room" and "moon" do not rhyme. Here are some words that rhyme with moon: boon dune goon loon noon rune soon spoon strewn toon tune
It's not a perfect rhyme, but it is a "close rhyme". A perfect rhyme would be "us" and "muss".
No. To have a rhyme, the beginning consonants of the word MUST be different.
Technically no--for one of two reasons: 1) to "rhyme," two words must have the same "rhyme sound," preceded by a different "consonantal sound" and 2) the accent must be on the same syllable. (Note: the different preceding consonantal sound in the two words are "t" in "ten" and "c" in "-cent.") The rhyme sound in "ten" is "-en" and in "per-cent" is "-ent." "-en and "-ent" clearly are different rhyme sounds because of the "t" in "-ent." In pronouncing "percent," the accented syllable is arguably the second syllable "-cent" and thus that part of the definition of a rhyme is met, but the rhyme still fails because of the first part of the definition of a rhyme. See http://www.wikirhymer.com/Rhyme+Definition for further information.