Onion
Nation
No, letters.
boughs, coughs, roughs
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.
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.
No. All and dawn do not have the same last two (or three) letters. The endings do not sound the same either.
No, hesitation and aggravation do not rhyme. Rhyme is based on the similarity of the sound at the end of two words, and in this case, the endings of these two words do not sound the same.
No,usually you have to rhyme with the last letters. Just like read and lead
They are end rhymes, meaning only the last letters of the words rhyme, in this case the "ty". Sometimes end rhymes sound okay in poetry, but they are not perfect rhymes.
addallassbeeboocooebbeggerrfeegeeillinnleeloomoooddoffpeeseeteetoozoo
They are end rhymes, meaning the last letters (in this case, "on") rhyme, but they are not exact rhymes.
Yes, "mouth" and "house" rhyme because they share the same "-ow" sound at the end.
Yes, but only as an "end rhyme", meaning the last part of the words rhyme, not the whole words.