Rhymes usually occur in the same places throughout a poem. This regularity is known as the rhyme pattern or rhyme scheme. You can direct a rhyme scheme by assigning letters to designate the words at the end of lines. The same letter is used for words having the same sounds. Thus, a simple rhyme scheme would be abcb. This pattern shows that the words at the end of lines two and four rhyme, but that the words at the end of lines one and three do not.
Sure, here are some examples of rhyme in a sentence:
Do u mean, what word rhymes with sentence? If so,
sentance
fentence
pentance
lentence
tentence
asentence
epentance
repentance
repentence
nonsentence
resentence
inhentance
presentence
presenttense
compentence
maintentance
unrepentance
representance
incompentence
nonrepentance
Consider using these near-rhymes or slant-rhymesindcpendance
indcpendence
iudependence
litispendance
tndependence
superintendence
lndependence
overdependence
superintendance
selfdependence
lndependance
nondependence
fielddependence
semidependence
antidependence
powerdependence
agedependence
crossdependence
dosedependence
imerdependence
indenpendence
minddependence
nterdependence
rindependance
snperintendance
transascendence
interdependence
preindependence
interdependance
timedependence
inrerdependence
oflndependence
pseudoindependence
quasiindependence
nontranscendence
drugdependence
energydependence
jndependence
mterdependence
ofindependence
supcrintendance
transdescendence
postindependence
selftranscendence
nonindependence
proindependence
counterdependence
fuperintendance
fuperintendence
gerotranscendence
lnterdependence
semiindependence
antiindependence
intradependence
selfindependence
densitydependence
fieldindependence
interindependence
mindindependence
pressuredependence
contextdependence
compulsoryattendance
voltagedependence
temperaturedependence
frequencydependence
dependenceindependence
concentrationdependence
independencedependence
Dr. Seuss loved to rhyme. He loved to figure out new ways to rhyme words with other words and make it entertaining.
You say you love but you don't
You say you will do it but you won't
You are always to busy to take me out
Please someone tell me what's that's about?
blue/blew
Roses are red violets are blue, some poems rhyme, this one doesn't.
Some examples of off rhyme words include "moon" and "tone," "cat" and "bad," or "clear" and "hair." Off rhyme occurs when words have similar but not identical sounds.
Examples of fables are poems that do not have a rhyme scheme, but they often rhyme. Some examples of fables would be: The boy who cried wolf, the tortous and the hare. They poems that teach life lessons.
Some examples of feminine rhyme in the poem "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe are: "dreary" and "weary" "token" and "spoken" "burden" and "word in" "betook" and "forsook"
Some examples of rhyme schemes in John Hansen's poem "Bigfoot's Complaint" include AABB, ABAB, and ABCB. These rhyme schemes help create a playful and structured tone in the poem.
There are many words that rhyme with the word "mind." Some examples would be: kind, find, blind, bind, and fined.
Some words that rhyme with "examples" include samples, tramples, and pampers.
Some examples are:-HadSadMadTadCadLadBadRadCladPlaid (the word is pronounced 'plad')
mow - how height - weight comb - tomb etc.
rhyme scheme aaabab is one
have it rhyme with the LAST word in the sentence above or the second sentence above it.