A limerick is made up of five lines where the first second and fith lines rhyme with each other and then the third and fourth rhyme with each other this style of writing is known as aabba or referred to as being anapestic which basically means two short syllables followed by one long one
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Lecherous Limericks was created in 1975.
Common types of limericks include humorous, nonsensical, and bawdy. Humorous limericks often feature clever wordplay and puns, while nonsensical limericks focus on creating whimsical and imaginative scenarios. Bawdy limericks tend to contain more risqué or suggestive content.
The second word of many limericks is typically "was."
Examples of Christmas limericks can be viewed from websites that offer a wide variety of different English literature such as poems, short stories, and limericks in particular.
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limericks are surpose to be fun and there met to be funny.
Edward Lear is known as 'The Father of Limericks' for his popularization of the five-line humorous poem. Lear's book "A Book of Nonsense" published in 1846, contained numerous limericks that helped establish the form's popularity.
The pattern is AABBA
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Ogden Nash