There are actually quite a number of different rhyme types accepted in the literary community.
Some, such as the "Assonant rhyme", which is defined as having the same vowel sounds but varying consistent sounds, yes, they do rhyme.
However, if you go with the most common definition of a rhyme, that is, what the literary community would call a "Perfect Rhyme", you are limited to words that begin with different sounds, but end with the same sounds.
By this layman definition, song would rhyme with gong, but not with gone, and gone would rhyme with dawn.
Long/gone is considered a 'soft rhyme' which means it rhymes but in a more subtle manner so technically yes long and gone do rhyme :)
No, unless you say it in a poem or a song!
The king, the queen and a maid
Yes, hot does rhyme with not.
They are what is known as a "close rhyme", but not a perfect rhyme.
no.
Yes, "gone" and "swan" rhyme because they both end in the "-awn" sound.
The Rhyme - song - was created on 1996-10-21.
nope!
gone
Long/gone is considered a 'soft rhyme' which means it rhymes but in a more subtle manner so technically yes long and gone do rhyme :)
The nursery rhyme song "Itsy Bitsy Spider" was sung by Carly Simon in the 1970s.
song,
no
Are limericks required to rhyme? They are, almost all of the time. Consider it rude If rhymes are eschewed Then they wouldn't be nearly as funny.
Yes. The ABC song rhymes.
The rhyme scheme for the song "Love Like Woe" by The Ready Set is AABBCCDD.