I think it's alright to, but be careful of how you do it. Switching the rhyme scene too much can lead to inconsistencies in voice, and might throw your reader off. It all depends on what you plan to do with the poem.
Sonnet and bonnet.
A rhyming couplet, or two-line stanza, is used at the end of a Shakespearean sonnet. A rhyming sestet, or six-line stanza, ends a Petrarchan sonnet.
No, "beautiful" and "wonderful" are not rhyming words. Rhyming words have similar ending sounds, but these two words do not sound the same at the end.
internal rhyming
the lines are divided into two quatrains and two rhyming couplets
fast blast
A Shakespearean sonnet has three quatrains (four-line stanzas) followed by a rhyming couplet (two-line stanza) at the end. This structure is also known as the English sonnet.
Yes, a sonnet traditionally follows a specific rhyme scheme, often using either the Petrarchan (abbaabba cdecde) or Shakespearean (ababcdcdefef gg) rhyme scheme. Rhyming is a key characteristic of a sonnet.
In a sonnet, the couplet is located at the end of the poem. It consists of two rhyming lines that often summarize the main theme or offer a surprising twist on the preceding lines of the sonnet.
A sonnet is unique in that it has 14 rhyming lines of equal length. Two of the most famous writers of sonnets in the English language were William Shakespeare and Edmund Spenser.
No, it does not, though usually there is a pattern of two or more lines rhyming with each other. But usually not all 14 lines have the same rhyme sound.
A slant sonnet is not an actual sonnet, but a rhyme scheme of a sonnet. A rhyme scheme for a Shakespearean Sonnet is ABABCDCDEFEFGG. This means that every other line (ABAB) will rhyme. A slant rhyme though deviates from this slightly. While you are still rhyming, the sounds of the two rhyming words may sound different. Ex from Shakespere's Sonnet 18: "Thou art more lovely and more temperate: / And summer's lease has all too short a date:" The words Temperate and Date rhyme, but you can tell that they don't rhyme 100%.