"Old longings nomadic leap,
Chafing at a custom's chain;
Again from its brumal sleep
Wakens the ferine strain."
-(London, 1)
the title is a medaphor
Dreamtale - Call of the Wild
rhyme scheme aaabab is one
"Never in his life has he been so vilely treated and never in his life had he been so angry" (London 13)
awkward blundere
the title is a medaphor
blue/blew
Some examples of off rhyme words include "moon" and "tone," "cat" and "bad," or "clear" and "hair." Off rhyme occurs when words have similar but not identical sounds.
Dreamtale - Call of the Wild
Examples of fables are poems that do not have a rhyme scheme, but they often rhyme. Some examples of fables would be: The boy who cried wolf, the tortous and the hare. They poems that teach life lessons.
Dreamtale - Call of the Wild
Some examples of feminine rhyme in the poem "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe are: "dreary" and "weary" "token" and "spoken" "burden" and "word in" "betook" and "forsook"
Some examples of rhyme schemes in John Hansen's poem "Bigfoot's Complaint" include AABB, ABAB, and ABCB. These rhyme schemes help create a playful and structured tone in the poem.
There are many words that rhyme with the word "mind." Some examples would be: kind, find, blind, bind, and fined.
syllabic rhyme - the last syllable of each word sounds the same. ie Ron and john mowed the lawnor just rhyme
Some words that rhyme with "examples" include samples, tramples, and pampers.
Some examples are:-HadSadMadTadCadLadBadRadCladPlaid (the word is pronounced 'plad')