Rhyming couplets are used in poetry, mostly poetry of Western styles. Some rhyming couplets are also used in sonnets. Most of Shakespeare's works use rhyming couplets.
A couplet is two successive lines of verse which rhyme.
That sort of two-line rhyme is usually called a couplet. However, couplets don't *always* have to rhyme. Here is a link to the wikipedia entry for couplet, if you would like to know more: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Couplet
A couplet is a pair of lines in a poem which rhyme. In an English sonnet, only (the last two lines) form a couplet.
...a rhyming couplet. If the first syllable of each line is stressed, it's a 'heroic' rhyming couplet.
Simply put... A heroic couplet is two lines of rhymed iambic pentameter, while a couplet may still rhyme, but is not in iambic pentameter. The difference is the meter.
A two line poem is called a couplet, they must rhyme though the ending words that is =D hope that helps
This is a rhyming couplet. It has the pattern aabbcc etc.
Typically, couplets rhyme and have the same meter. They make up a unit or complete thought. Hush, little baby, don't you cry. Mama's gonna sing you a lullaby. A Rhyme Scheme is usually repeated in each Stanza of a given work, so if the first Stanza is an ABAB, generally the subsequent Stanzas are also.
A rhyming couplet. A 2 sentence rhyme is where the first and second sentence rhyme, the second set (3rd and 4th line) rhyme, etc.
Badass ---- iambic tetrameter couplet
A couplet is a group of two, and a triplet is a group of three.
The name for the rhyme scheme AABB is known as a "couplet rhyme scheme." This means that every two lines rhyme with each other.