A rainy day is dull and gloomy. It rains all day long. The sky is overcast with thick clouds. The sky is not seen. None can go out without an umbrella. Water stand on roads and roads become muddy and slippery.
The rhyme scheme of Jane Yolen's poem "Earth Day" is AABBCC, where each stanza has rhyming pairs of lines.
Basically ABCBDEFE, although at least one verse has odd-numbered lines that do rhyme.
The rhyme scheme for stanza one of "A Fine Day" is AABB.
The simple and rhythmic sounds of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's "The Rainy Day" are a product of the poem's use of consistent meter and rhyme scheme. Longfellow uses iambic tetrameter and an ABAB rhyme scheme, creating a musical quality that enhances the poem's contemplative tone.
aab
The rhyme scheme for "Some Keep the Sabbath Day" by Emily Dickinson is irregular and does not follow a specific pattern. Dickinson often experimented with rhyme and meter in her poetry, deviating from traditional structures.
The rhyme scheme of "Bang the Drum All Day" by Todd Rundgren is AABBCCDD. Each verse consists of four rhyming couplets.
In the first, second, fourth, and seventh stanzas the rhyme scheme is a, b, a, b. In the third, fifth, and sixth stanzas, the rhyme scheme is a, b, c, b; however, there is an internal rhyme into the third line: "he" and "tree" "dead" and "head" "day" and "Calay!"
A Triplet, as in: Do not go gentle into that good night. Old age should burn and rave at close of day, Rage, Rage against the dying of the light. The poem is made up of 5 triplets (such as this, the first one in rhyme scheme aba) and a quatrain at the end (four-line stanza, rhyme scheme abab).
An example of rhyme scheme would include the following: I like to eat while dancing to a beat i like to yell while playing the cow bell I like to run all day while listening to the Fray i like to pet my dog, while sitting on a log. The rhyme scheme would be A,A,B,B,C,C,D,D. rhyme scheme is based on the end rhyme or external rhyme of each line. For each line that rhymes with another line, they receive the same letter. If the word contains no other similar rhyme that starts a new letter of the pattern.
Just look at the last words of each line: day, temperate, May, date, shines, dimm'd, declines, untrimm'd, fade, owest, shade, growest, see, thee. Then check to see which words rhyme with each other: "day" rhymes with "May", so we say that both of those lines have rhyme "a"; "temperate" and "date" rhyme so we call these two lines rhyme "b". Therefore the rhyme scheme of the first four lines is abab. You can figure out the rest in about two seconds: it's a typical Shakespearean sonnet.
The rhyming scheme for The Old Brown Horse by W.F. Holmes is ABCB. When the poem is divided into quatrains (four lines at a time), the last word in the second and fourth lines rhyme.