alliteration
No. They have the same last two letters, but the rest of the letters of the words are pronounced differently. Rhyme depends on pronunciation, not just spelling.
They do not rhyme. They don't rhyme because they don't sound alike, and the fact that they don't have the same last two letters.
No. All and dawn do not have the same last two (or three) letters. The endings do not sound the same either.
They are end rhymes, meaning only the last few letters (in this case, "tion") rhyme. They are not perfect rhymes.
aardvark
eek
eels
Yes, "two" and "do" rhyme. They both have the same long "oo" vowel sound at the end, creating a rhyme.
the letter O has many different pronunciations. In brown, the O sounds like "ow!" In grown, the O sounds like, "oh." If the O's in these two letters were pronounced the same, then they would rhyme. But since they are pronounced differently, they do not rhyme.
End rhyme occurs when the last syllables or words in two or more lines of a poem rhyme with each other. To determine if a poem contains end rhyme, look for words at the end of lines that have similar sounds. If these end words rhyme, then the poem contains end rhyme.
Di (the first two letters of "district") en (the first two letters in "end") te (the first two letters in "tell")
same name