It simply means that the first two lines and the last line end with the same rhyme, and the third and fourth lines have a different rhyme to the others.
For example:
An Anglican curate in want (a)
Of a secondhand portable font (a)
Would exchange, for the same (b)
A portrait, in frame, (b)
Of The Bishop Elect of Vermont (a)
rhyme scheme.
Rhyme scheme - in a limerick with an aabba rhyme scheme, lines 1, 2, and 5 rhyme with each other, and lines 3 and 4 rhyme with each other.
It simply means that the first two lines and the last line end with the same rhyme, and the third and fourth lines have a different rhyme to the others.For example:An Anglican curate in want (a)Of a secondhand portable font (a)Would exchange, for the same (b)A portrait, in frame, (b)Of The Bishop Elect of Vermont (a)
Uhhhhh . . . you could write a poem in the same meter as a limerick, but I believe that a real limerick must be humorous. I would say, "No".
A limerick is made up of five lines where the first second and fith lines rhyme with each other and then the third and fourth rhyme with each other this style of writing is known as aabba or referred to as being anapestic which basically means two short syllables followed by one long one
Shannon Airport is NOT in Dublin. It is in the south-west of Ireland, just outside Limerick.Flights from Heathrow to Dublin take about 1 hour and 10 minutesFlights from Heathrow to Shannon take about 1 hours and 15 mnutes
No. They're not having such a rubbish show near my home, regardless of Shaant! I just say they have it in... Thurles instead. Definatly not in Limerick
That is a matter of opinion. Most people in the world would not say that it is.
I think you need to say what sort of 'form' you mean. Without context, 'form' could mean almost anything.
The third form of the verb "mean" is "meant." In the context of verb conjugation, "mean" is the base form, "meant" is the simple past, and "meant" is also the past participle. For example, you would say, "I mean," "I meant," and "I have meant."
A limerick is a five-line poem written with one couplet and one triplet. If a couplet is a two-line rhymed poem, then a triplet would be a three-line rhymed poem. The rhyme pattern is a a b b a with lines 1, 2 and 5 containing 3 beats and rhyming, and lines 3 and 4 having two beats and rhyming. Some people say that the limerick was invented by soldiers returning from France to the Irish town of Limerick in the 1700's. Limericks are meant to be funny. They often contain hyperbole, onomatopoeia, idioms, puns, and other figurative devices. The last line of a good limerick contains the PUNCH LINE or "heart of the joke." As you work with limericks, remember to have pun, I mean FUN! Say the following limericks out loud and clap to the rhythm.
"He said" Dijo is a form of the word Decir. To say.