No, eye rhyme refers to words that appear to rhyme based on their spelling, but do not actually sound alike when pronounced.
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")
two or more words that sound alike. Example: cat-hat
Yes, "green giant" rhymes. The two words share the same ending sound "-ant."
though, rough, cough, tough, trough, dough, etc.
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.
Yes...words that sound alike typically do. Like YOU and DO or SUCK and LUCK
End rhyme occurs when the last syllables or words in two or more lines of a poem rhyme with each other. To determine if a poem contains end rhyme, look for words at the end of lines that have similar sounds. If these end words rhyme, then the poem contains end rhyme.
No, antonyms are opposite words. Homophones are words that sound alike but with different meanings, regardless of spelling.
The words 'weigh' and 'way' sound alike but have different spellings. The words 'weight' and 'wait' also sound alike but have different spellings.
No, "again" does not rhyme with "friend." Rhymes are determined by the ending sounds of words, and in this case, the "-ain" sound in "again" does not match the "-end" sound in "friend." Rhymes are important in poetry and music to create rhythm and flow in language.
The words "why" and "schism" in "great schism" rhyme because they end with the same sound "ism," creating a similar ending. This similarity in sounds can make the words sound alike when spoken together.
No, they do not. If you mean does guts have words that rhyme with it, and does cops have words that rhyme with it, yes, they do. Please ask the questions separately.