yes
It depends on your accent. If you say "poor" to rhyme with "snore" then "pour" is a homophone. But if you rhyme "poor" with "lure" or "tour" there is no homophone.paw
Words like at, in, to, so, poor, ...ing, ...ed are easy to rhyme.
Absolute rhyme is a pair of words that form a perfect rhyme. For example, fly and sky, death and meth, hat and scat, and last but not least, poor and door.
The nursery rhyme is called Mother Hubbed. It goes Old mother Hubbed went to her cobbed to fetch her poor dogie a bone when she got there the cobbed was bare so her poor dogie had none
mew, conclude (close), crew, J Crew (love this store!), dude (close) Good luck!
There are many variations but the most common is:To get her poor dog a bone.
poor management in the store, poor records taken when receiving goods
Yes because both of those words contain the same ending sounds.
=Words that rhyme with first:==thirst==burst, hurst==cursed==Words that rhyme with for:==boar , soar==door, poor==bore, core, fore, more, pore==caw, haw, jaw, law, maw=
Tom thumb is not a nursery rhyme but a fairy tale
Yes it does. like if you had a poem that said there once was a boy named jack that wonted a snack he ran to the store and at the door he fell and that is what happend to jack.
A store owner gives away some of his most valuable goods to the poor.