if you mean near rhyme than here is an answer
No, near rhyme is when two words look like they ought to rhyme, but they really don't. Trough and Through look a lot alike, but they don't sound the same.
no it does not rhyme what kind of question is that
Absolute rhyme is a pair of words that form a perfect rhyme. For example, fly and sky, death and meth, hat and scat, and last but not least, poor and door.
Yes, example: I saw barney at the party.
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."
Silent consonants are words that are spelled with silent letters. Example: Knife - the k is silent - and it is pronounced "nife" but is spelled knife
Yes.
Types of rhyme include end rhyme (rhyming at the end of lines), internal rhyme (rhyming within a line), and slant rhyme (near rhyme or partial rhyme). In "An African Thunderstorm" by David Rubadiri, an example of end rhyme is "humming, drumming" in the lines "The air is split / By a bolt of lighting; / thunderclaps / Shatter ear drums;" rattling, battling, sand and land .
no it does not rhyme what kind of question is that
Not unless you pronounce it "saf-ear."
No. Hear and near are not an example of slant rhyme.
Olaf and pilaf is one example of half rhyme.
earn learn yearn
An example of rhyme would be "your tryin to be cool, you look like a fool'' from Avril Lavignes Complicated.
No.
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.
An example of exact rhyme is "cat" and "hat" where both words end with the same sound "-at".
Pleasure and treasure