Yes. "Plough" is another way of spelling the word "plow," (and which is an incorrect way of spelling "plow" in the American English language) which, when rhymed with "cow," indeed sounds the same.
cow plow cow plowmoo crew, cow plow
The word "plow" is pronounced as "plow" (rhymes with "cow").
No. bough has one syllable, while arrow has two. If you need a rhyme for bough, try: now, plow, cow, bow, how, row, sow, vow or wow. A nice rhyme would be: How now brown cow... If you need a rhyme for arrow, try: narrow, barrow, farrow, sparrow or taro. A nice rhyme would be: She wheeled her wheelbarrow through streets broad and narrow...
The cow pulls the plow. Without the cow, there would be no agriculture. You do not eat your seed corn. You do not kill and eat the animal that pulls your plow.
The letter combination "ow" makes two different sounds. The "ow" as in cow sound is contained in these words that rhyme: cow, sow, bow (as in the bow of a boat), thou, plow. The "ow" as in crow sound is contained in these words that rhyme: row, blow, show, mow, tow, crow, throw, flow.
A cow invented the plow how? well thts for u to fuind out!
Happy cow can rhyme with a lot of things. You can say happy cow is a big Sal.
The words how and cow rhyme with each other. Bow and row rhyme with each other. But how and cow do not rhyme with bow and row.
cow plow
The verb slough rhymes with tough.
moo cow
the maiden milked the cow in this is the house that jack built==