From rhymezone.com:
Words and phrases that rhyme with verse: (55 results)
1 syllable:
bearce, bearse, bearss, burse, curse, firsts, furse, hearse, kearse, kerce, merce, nurse, pearse, perce, pers, perse, purse, scearce, terse, worse
2 syllables:
adverse, averse, coerce, converse, disburse, disperse, diverse, dry nurse, emerse, get worse, head nurse, immerse, inverse, obverse, perverse, rehearse, reverse, scrub nurse, sea purse, submerse, trained nurse, transverse, traverse, wet nurse
3 syllables:
intersperse, privy purse, reimburse, shepherd's purse, student nurse
4 syllables:
biodiverse, graduate nurse, practical nurse, registered nurse, visiting nurse
6 syllables:
licensed practical nurse
curses
STANZARhymes within lines are simply called internal rhymes. Internal rhymes generally enrich the sonorities of the poem, and may emphasise comparison or contrast between the rhyming words of the internal rhyme. Internal rhyme might also be present to maintain the versification or structure of the poem; the line does not break after the internal rhyme because the whole line maintains the structure of the poem, or a certain number of syllables are needed in the whole line. Internal rhymes are generally considered to relax the rigidity of verse with strict metre and rhyme between lines.
dance rhymes with glance cancer rhymes with dancer
Rhymes with Breanna:AnaAnnaBananaCabanaDanaHanaHannaHannahLanaNanaRanaRhiannaSanaSantanaTana
Rhymes with Alyssa:CarissaMelissa
Non-verse writing can also be called free verse writing. This means that a traditional form of verse, like iambic pentameter, is not used.
Blank verse does not have rhymes.
verse
It can be called a free-verse.
"Poem" rhymes with "lone".
the song is called Look at me now , by Chris Brown (1st verse) , Busta Rhymes ( 2nd verse and Lil` Wayne (3rd verse) .
Not any true rhymes - as in that contain the exact sound "-ospects" - but there are some imperfect rhymes that would fit well in a poem or verse: - objects - convex - on decks - projects - Oz Tex
It may have some . However, it doesn't have to rhyme or follow a particiular pattern.
verse converse transverse (e.g. waves) obverse reverse
"fine teen" rhymes with "nineteen". Of course, you can have the preceding verse end in any word that rhymes with just the "teen" in "nineteen".
Hip-hop, Rap. His songs are famous for a variety of techniques, he can use 'rests' to provide structure to a verse and and uses 'partial linking' to add more rhymes to a verse.
stage
hearse, purse, adverse, converse, traverse, terse, verse, reimburse See the Related Link for more