Yes.
"Bright, height, and kite" all rhyme with "finite."
No, nineteen does not rhyme with kite. Rhyming words share a similar sound at the end of the word, but "nineteen" ends with the "-teen" sound while "kite" ends with the "-ite" sound.
By modern standards, no. In the "rum ram ruf" alliteration sense (mostly) predating Chaucer, yes.
No, the word "friends" does not rhyme with "bite." Some words that do rhyme with bite follow: fight height kite light lite might mite night plight quite rite right sight site smite sleight spite tight wight white
bite, site, fight, height, right, might, kite, light, knight, lite, nite, quite, rite, sight, white, excite, all right, alite
bite, fight, height, kite, light, might, mite, night, plight, quite, right, rite, polite, site, sight, tight, trite, white, bright, blight, delight
There are a myriad of words that rhyme with "wright:" Night, flight, kite, bite, sight, fight, height, light, might, plight, right, tight, unite…
The vowel sound is the same in both, yes, but they don't actually rhyme because the final consonant sounds are different.
kite, height, might
Use the sine ratio to find the height of the kite: sine = opposite (height of kite with the horizontal) divided by the hypotenuse (the string) Rearrange the formula: sine*hypotenuse = opposite sine 25 degrees*150 = 63.39273926 feet Height of kite above the ground: 63.39273926+4.5 = 67.89273926 feet Therefore the kite is 68 feet above the ground to the nearest foot
30.0 ft
To rhyme a phrase, first see what rhymes with each word, and then try to match them up for a rhyme. Words that rhyme with white: fight height kite light might night mite plight quite right sight site slight spite smite tight wight Words that rhyme with shirt: dirt girt hurt pert spurt So, something like "might hurt" could work.