difference between rhyme scheme or rhyme word
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Ans= Rhyme scheme is a poet's deliberate pattern of lines that rhyme with other lines in a poem or a stanza. The rhyme scheme, or pattern, can be identified by giving end words that rhyme with each other the same letter. The first line ends in the word 'star', and the second line ends in the word 'are'.
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- ☘A rhyme scheme can be most any way you like/need it to be. Here are some examples:
- ☘A B A B, or A B C B, or A B B A, or even separated by whole stanzas.
- ☘A B A C and A B A C, among others. You can even have a rhyme scheme within a line/series of lines (following the same rules), though that can be rather difficult to do properly.
- ☘Free Verse poems don’t even have a rhyme scheme.
- ☘Also, there are Sonnets:
- ☘(Shakespearean version) A B A B, C D C D, E F E F, G G
- ☘In a sonnet, when properly done, no rhyme is used twice. Like “you” and “too”. Once used, that ending sound cannot be used again in that type of poem/rhyme scheme.
- Basically, in a nutshell, rhyme scheme is pretty much however you want it in many cases.
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