The rhyme for telling milk and coral snakes apart is; Red on yellow, kill a fellow Red on black, your all right Jack
The milk snake is colored similarly to the highly venomous coral snake. This wards away potential attackers, believing the harmless milk snake to be the poisonous coral snake. To discern the difference between the two (a life or death situation), one must simply remember this rhyme: "Red on yellow, deadly fellow; red on black, venom lack."
If you mean the rhyme to distinguish between a coral snake and a milk snake... Red touches yellow - kill a fellow, red touches black - venom lack. it is important to mention that this saying only works for telling those two species apart. it doesn't work when distinguishing between snakes outside of north America
the main thing is weather/whether
It depends whether you have the "s" at the end of "bouquets" or not."Bouquets" is pronounced BOH-kays. Singular, it is BOH-kay. So singularly, yes, it does rhyme with bouquet.
There are other non-poisonous snakes that are similar to the coral snake but different patterns of color. Only the coral snake has bands of red and yellow that touch. Red on yellow, kill a fellow.
Please see the link below. You can decide whether the words are "nice" or not.
look for patterns in rhyme, meter, and phrasing hope this helps :)
Together, clever, and never, if ever, sever, lever, tether, feather, weather, whether,
Internal rhyme.
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Assuming you're talking about the rhyme to remember the colour bands - to check which snake you're looking at...Red touches yellow, can kill a fellowRed touches black, venom lackThe colour bands on a Coral snake are in the order red-yellow-black-yellow.Those of the milk snake are red-black-yellow-black- The order of these bands is repeated down the snakes body.
Rhyme, whether written or spoken, relies on sound; spelling is irrelevant in choosing rhyming words.