Vile
They are close rhymes but not exact rhymes.
He didn't write the words, only the music.
Personification
No, smile and wild do not rhyme. "Smile" has a long "i" sound, while "wild" has a short "i" sound.
ABAB describes the rhyme scheme: the first and third lines rhyme, and the second and fourth lines rhyme. A:Flowers Blooming in May, B:Birds in the sky Flying; A:Oh This Flower will Smile Today, B:Tomorrow it will be Dying.
No, a smile is not personification. Personification is when human characteristics are given to non-human things. A smile is a facial expression showing happiness or pleasure rather than an object or concept being given human qualities.
"Love Ballad" by Jeffery Osborn contains poetic devices such as rhyme scheme (ABAB), imagery (e.g. "mesmerized by your smile"), repetition (e.g. "every word you say, echoes in my mind"), and personification (e.g. "the wind whispers your name"). These devices enhance the emotional and lyrical nature of the poem.
Yes.
The author of the short poem is unknown, but one of the oldest versions of it (using honey instead of sugar) was in a 1784 collection of nursery rhymes by Joseph Ritson (who was not the author).
Some words that rhyme with Niall are trial, dial, and vial.
a smile is a conperision using like or as and a metaphor is a comparition,but its do not use like or as,tomak the comparition and personification is
Tile?? A Green Tile? Bile.