Yes.
The key with three flats (Bb, Eb, Ab) is the key of Eb.
A limerick .
All lines are not the same length in a limerick poem. To be a limerick, the first, second, and fifth lines have three metrical feet and lines three and four have two metrical feet. Also, the endings of lines one, two, and five rhyme, and the endings of lines three and four rhyme.
It isn't a perfect rhyme, in other words, not all the syllables rhyme, but it is close enough to pass as a rhyme.
Three flats is either E-flat major or C minor.
No.
No. A rhyme needs to have the same ending sounds such as talk and walk or spot and forgot.
These three are crucial elements to a song. A rhyme gives correspondence to sounds of words at the end of each line. Timing refers to the beat of the rhythm, while the key is a scale upon which a musical piece is based.
Some words that rhyme with "Do Re Mi" are he, she, me, and key.
bee, flee, glee
No
Yes.
No, but Louise rhymes with "threes", as in "I am counting by threes".
yep
three
Yeah it does
By modern standards, no. In the "rum ram ruf" alliteration sense (mostly) predating Chaucer, yes.