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.
for the key on the kite
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.
No. A rhyme needs to have the same ending sounds such as talk and walk or spot and forgot.
That electricity can pass through metal. There was a key on the kite.
because the kite string does not conduct electricity, the key does.