This is called an "eye rhyme" and sometimes one word will be deliberately mispronounced to make an actual rhyme, or for literary effect.
This is the type of end rhyme referred to as "true rhyme."
crafter
after
disaster
plaster
master
drafter
faster
pasture
rafter
eye rhyme
true rhyme
dayshavo is were something happens and then some thing very similar happens in the futureit's a reminder of what was lived in past life which reoccured w\ reliving present time
Hhhjjjjjjjjjj
"Odiar" means "to hate". It is a cognate (It sounds similar to a word in English) because it is similar to "Odious", which means: extremely unpleasant, repulsive, something you hate.
hire
eye rhyme
eye rhyme
He received a call / about a bill / before he fell. - APEX
true rhyme
true rhyme
true rhyme
pantomimes are similar to theaters because they both have laughter and other emotions in them.
No. Kookaburra is a bird native to Australia. It has a call similar to a laughter.
No they look alike but sound differently. Like rhyming "tough" with "bough" or "laughter" with "daughter". Usually such words used to rhyme but pronounciations have changed the sound of one of the words, while spelling has remained constant. (E.g. "daughter" used to sound like "laughter")
the daughter cells have similar DNA
The leopard, similar in appearance.
The early embryos of all animals have a very similar appearance. This is no different for chicken and pig embryos.