No. Hear and near are not an example of slant rhyme.
It is a near rhyme, but not a perfect rhyme.
earn learn yearn
These are partial or imperfect rhymes, like dry-died, or grown-moon. They are sometimes called half rhyme, near rhyme or oblique rhyme.
Lullaby is a near rhyme for alibi.
if you mean near rhyme than here is an answer No, near rhyme is when two words look like they ought to rhyme, but they really don't. Trough and Through look a lot alike, but they don't sound the same.
It is not an exact rhyme but it is a near rhyme.
While not an exact rhyme, they are a near rhyme.
No. Hear and near are not an example of slant rhyme.
Types of rhyme include end rhyme (rhyming at the end of lines), internal rhyme (rhyming within a line), and slant rhyme (near rhyme or partial rhyme). In "An African Thunderstorm" by David Rubadiri, an example of end rhyme is "humming, drumming" in the lines "The air is split / By a bolt of lighting; / thunderclaps / Shatter ear drums;" rattling, battling, sand and land .
no it does not rhyme what kind of question is that
yes, its called a near rhyme.
Near rhyme. not the same but close.
Not unless you pronounce it "saf-ear."
The only REAL rhyme is predictable but delectable is a near rhyme
The term for getting the rhyme slightly wrong is called a "slant rhyme" or "near rhyme." It occurs when two words have similar but not identical sounds, creating a subtle contrast in their rhyme.
It is a near rhyme, but not a perfect rhyme.