Yes, hair does rhyme with square.
The rhyme scheme of a limerick is: A-A-B-B-A, meaning lines 1, 2 and 5 (A) rhyme and lines 3 and 4 (B) also rhyme.
No it does not.
When crossing two wavy-haired individuals, represented by the alleles W (wavy) and w (straight), a Punnett square would show the possible genotypes of their offspring. The potential combinations would be WW (wavy), Ww (wavy), and ww (straight). Specifically, the Punnett square would yield a 1:2:1 ratio, with 75% of the offspring expected to have wavy hair (either WW or Ww) and 25% with straight hair (ww).
Well, honey, A B A B A B is not a rhyme scheme, it's more like a pattern of alternating rhymes. A true rhyme scheme would involve different letters representing different end sounds in each line. So, keep those rhymes coming and shake it up a bit!
pail ,hail,jail,snail,
no boar, door, four, more, pour, score hair, square, pair, mare, tear, fair
No they do not, that association would be considered a "like rhyme" but not a true rhyme.
Yes.
fare
hair, care, lair, mare
Pig wig.
Hair
fair and far
A square is a four-sided polygon with four right angles. Some boy's names that rhyme with square are Thayer, and Lar (short for Larry), and Gar (short for Garrett).
weird beard
No, according to the popular children's rhyme, "fuzzy wuzzy had no hair." That is why his name was so odd.
"Hair" and "scared" are really close, but they don't quite make a perfect rhyme because they have different endings. If you did "hair" and "scare" it would work, or even "hairy" and "scary" or "haired" and "scared." That last part has to sound the same as well.