Aloha: It is not nice, so I will not print it here.
Aloha: He mea 'ole (or) ho'omaika'i [hay may-ah o-lay] or [ho o-my-ka ee].
Kēia lā [kay-ee-ah lah]. The kahakō over a vowel donotes a prolonged or stressed sound of the vowel, not the long sound common to English words where a vowel says it's name.
The word "says" is in present tense.
The word "says" does not have an apostrophe in its standard form. It is a present tense verb that does not require an apostrophe.
Yes, the "s" in "says" is a silent consonant.
Not really, but who says things always have to rhyme.
I was so glad I had my faith the night I saw that awful wraith.
Some words that rhyme with "sez" are "says" and "fez."
When the King says move, it moves.
It says caffeine free right on the can or label.
the tattoo says Jesus in Hawaiian language .
: Simple Simon met a pieman : Going to the fair; : Says Simple Simon to the pieman, : "Let me taste your ware." : Says the pieman to Simple Simon, : "Show me first your penny." : Says Simple Simon to the pieman, : "Indeed I have not any."
Aloha: He mea 'ole (or) ho'omaika'i [hay may-ah o-lay] or [ho o-my-ka ee].
It has to do with like sounds, not so much with similar spelling or rhythm. So yes, in that sense they would rhyme.
Some words that rhyme with "keeg" include league, fatigue, intrigue, and intrigue.
The nursery rhyme you are referring to is likely "Little Jack Horner." In the rhyme, Little Jack Horner sticks in his thumb, pulls out a plum, and says, "What a good boy am I." The plum is often depicted as a pie in popular culture adaptations.
The nursery rhyme that mentions serious overcrowding in a unique dwelling is "There Was an Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe." The rhyme describes the old woman and her numerous children living in a shoe, highlighting the crowded conditions within the footwear.