Yes, daughter and laughter are an eye/sight rhyme.
"Move" and "love" form an eye rhyme in "A Girl in Love."
No, "eye" and "night" do not rhyme. Rhymes are words that have similar ending sounds, and in this case, the sounds in "eye" and "night" are not the same.
Yes, eye and away are a slant rhyme also hands and sands, sea and me, and along and appointed.
No, eye rhyme refers to words that appear to rhyme based on their spelling, but do not actually sound alike when pronounced.
prudent
Words that look like they should rhyme, but don't. love and move
This is an example of an eye rhyme, where words look like they should rhyme due to their spelling but are pronounced differently.
This is called an "eye rhyme" and sometimes one word will be deliberately mispronounced to make an actual rhyme, or for literary effect.
aye-aye
because of the long 'eye' sound at the ending
The statement "Rhyme must always occur at the end of a line" is not true. Rhyme can occur at the end of lines (end rhyme) or within a single line (internal rhyme). Rhyme can also be less strict, such as slant rhyme or eye rhyme.