"Snow" and "ago" don't rhyme perfectly, but they would rhyme if you put them both into a poem and paid attention to the syllables and emphasis.
"Ago" has two syllables, and "snow" has one. Just put some other really short word before snow (like "the"), or if you are just rhyming the end sounds anyway, you can probably make it work. :)
No, toad does not rhyme with snow. However, toad does rhyme with snowed, the past tense of "snow".
Yes.
Yes.
tow
No, blow and rainbow do not rhyme. Here are some words that do rhyme with blow: foe go low mow no row so sew stow slow snow tow To get a rhyme for rainbow, you might have to go with a phrase. Something like "main foe" might work.
No, toad does not rhyme with snow. However, toad does rhyme with snowed, the past tense of "snow".
No, frog dosen't rhyme with snow
I believe not. Snow would rhyme with toe or glow and coco does not have the long ow/oe sound.
The poem "Snow in the Suburbs" by Thomas Hardy follows an ABAB rhyme scheme.
Yes, "so" and "ago" do not rhyme; they have different vowel sounds.
No, dust and snow are not end rhymes because they do not share the same end sound. An end rhyme occurs when two words at the end of a line rhyme with each other, such as "cat" and "bat."
Yes.
no
Yes.
Yes.
tow
Yes.