"The man all tattered and torn". See the Related link below for the entire text of the nursery rhyme.
No, "unicorn" and "forlorn" do not rhyme. "Unicorn" has a long "i" sound, while "forlorn" has a short "o" sound.
yes it's a half-rhyme
The nursery rhyme is "The House That Jack Built," where the verse about the husband reads: "This is the priest all shaven and shorn, that married the man all tattered and torn, that kissed the maiden all forlorn, that milked the cow with the crumpled horn, that tossed the dog, that worried the cat, that killed the rat, that ate the malt that lay in the house that Jack built." It does not mention keeping a wife in a shell.
The nursery rhyme "Georgie Porgie" includes the line "Georgie Porgie, pudding and pie, kissed the girls and made them cry." The rhyme portrays Georgie as a character who kisses girls without their consent.
maiden, played in, stayed in, laid in, layed in, weighed in
Yes, a sonnet traditionally consists of 14 lines and follows a specific rhyme scheme, so it does need to rhyme to be considered a traditional sonnet.
kissed, dissed, fist, gist, list, mist, wrist
Rhymes with dissing:BlissingDismissingFishingHissingKissingMissingPissingReminiscingRinsingRiskingWishing
The traditional rhyme scheme of an octave is ABBAABBA.
Aiden, raidin', hayden, laden, maiden, paden, pagan, menhaden
The traditional nursery rhyme that mentions a girl eating a meal of curds and whey is "Little Miss Muffet."
The following words rhyme with "Kettle":fettlemetalmettlenettlepetalsettleThe following words rhyme with "corn":acornadornairbornebasebornbighornblackthornbornbornebuckthornbullhorncareworndearborndehornfirstbornfoghornforborneforeswornforewarnforlornforswornforwornfreeborngreenhornhawthornhawthornehighbornhorninborninkhornleghornlonghornlornlovelornlowbornmornmournnewbornoutwornpopcornpornpronghornrebornscornseaborneshoehornshopwornshornshorthornsoilbornestillbornsubornswornthorntimeworntinhorntorntricorntwinbornunbornunshornunswornunwornwarnwaywornwell-wornwellbornwornCombine any pair of words from these two sets to create a rhyming phrase. For example: metal horn, fettle acorn or petal thorn.