By modern standards, no. In the "rum ram ruf" alliteration sense (mostly) predating Chaucer, yes.
No, "height" and "kite" do not rhyme. "Height" is pronounced as "hite" with a silent "gh," while "kite" is pronounced as "kyte."
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.
Benjamin Franklin did his experiment with a key on a kite in 1752.
The vowel sound is the same in both, yes, but they don't actually rhyme because the final consonant sounds are different.
Benjamin Franklin tied a key to a kite to see if lightning was electricity.
No.
He used a kite in a storm with a key tied to it's string.
He flew his kite during a storm and the metal key picked up the electricity from the lightning.
for the key on the kite
No. A rhyme needs to have the same ending sounds such as talk and walk or spot and forgot.
quite light might sight bite kite tight fight
That electricity can pass through metal. There was a key on the kite.