Slant rhyme or half rhyme is a type of rhyme formed by words with similar but not identical sounds, where either the vowels or the consonants of stressed syllables are identical.
frog, lug
Park, harsh
Perch, latch
Words that sound the same but don't exactly rhyme, such as Lover and brother. Or, Fish and promise, gone and from. Creating additional slant rhymes by changing one of the two syllables in your target word. For example, "button" could become "butter" or "beaten." Using extra words to create slant rhymes when no single word fits. For example, "Ninja" has a good slant rhyme with "skin ya," something that ninjas might do, or "in ya."
slant rhyme.
no, the vowel in the middles isn't the same
Salem, Caron, Fearun, Million, Trillion(etc), hellion, melon, felon, communication...
Of the pairs you offer: 'swamp' and 'damp' are the slant rime. 'hear' and 'near' is a true rime; fen / feeds, warm / true do not rime at all. In a true rime, the vowel sound and the consonants which follow it are a precise match: beat / sweet, hope / soap, grew / true. In a slant rime, the vowel sounds are a near match (any trailing consonants will normally be identical): beat / mate, hope / shape, grew / sow. You need to be careful with slant rime (most teachers aren't): sometimes a true rime in one accent will be a slant rime in a different one. Mayor / chair is a true rime in the English home counties, but a slant rime most other places that English is spoken.
No. Hear and near are not an example of slant rhyme.
Yes, "fen" and "feeds" is an example of a slant rhyme. Slant rhymes involve words that have similar-sounding endings but are not a perfect match, adding a subtle rhyme effect while not fully rhyming.
Yes, "swamp" and "damp" are an example of slant rhyme because they share similar ending sounds (the "-amp" sound) but are not exact rhymes.
Words like "love" and "prove" or "time" and "line" are examples of slant rhyme. They have similar ending sounds but are not perfect rhymes.
Endeavor is a slant rhyme for forever.
Emily Dickinson uses slant rhyme a lot in her poetry.
slant rhyme
Words that sound the same but don't exactly rhyme, such as Lover and brother. Or, Fish and promise, gone and from. Creating additional slant rhymes by changing one of the two syllables in your target word. For example, "button" could become "butter" or "beaten." Using extra words to create slant rhymes when no single word fits. For example, "Ninja" has a good slant rhyme with "skin ya," something that ninjas might do, or "in ya."
In Emily Dickinson's poem CXVIII, the slant rhyme scheme can be found in the second and fourth lines of each quatrain. An example is in the first quatrain with the words "tired" and "heard". This creates a subtle rhyme that isn't a perfect match, hence why it's called a slant rhyme.
Slant rhyme.
Yes, "cloth" and "wash" is an example of half rhyme, also known as slant rhyme. While they do not have the same ending sound, the vowel sounds are similar enough to create a partial rhyme.
no, but its a slant, or unperfect rhyme.