Exercise 3
Rhyme Time : What is the word ?
1. It rhymes with honey and means amusing
2. It rhymes with soften and means frequently.
3. It rhymes with cry and means opposite of low.
4. It rhymes with white and means to come to blows.
5. It rhymes with could and means nice.
6. It rhymes with fair and means a person who inherits.
7. It rhymes with mutton and means a greedy person.
8. It rhymes with wing and has something to do with a song.
9. It rhymes with grew and is the opposite of false.
10. It rhymes with tie and means what birds do.
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Answers
Answered by
23
1. Funny
2. Often
3. High
4. Fight
5. Good
6. Heir
7. Glutton
8. Sing
9. True
10. Fly
Please mark brainliest
2. Often
3. High
4. Fight
5. Good
6. Heir
7. Glutton
8. Sing
9. True
10. Fly
Please mark brainliest
Answered by
1
1. It rhymes with honey and means amusing - Funny
2. It rhymes with soften and means frequently. - Often
3. It rhymes with cry and means opposite of low. - High
4. It rhymes with white and means to come to blows. - Fight
5. It rhymes with could and means nice. - Good
6. It rhymes with fair and means a person who inherits. - Heir
7. It rhymes with mutton and means a greedy person. - glutton
8. It rhymes with wing and has something to do with a song. - sing
9. It rhymes with grew and is the opposite of false. - true
10. It rhymes with tie and means what birds do. - fly
Rhyme:
- Rhyme appears to be liked in part just as a pleasing repeating pattern.
- It also helps with memorization by acting as a potent mnemonic device.
- Regular use of tail rhyme aids in denoting line ends, making the listener more aware of the metrical structure.
- Poets employ it to suit their own needs, just like they do with other literary devices.
- William Shakespeare, for instance, frequently used a rhyming couplet to indicate the conclusion of a scene in a play.
- Poets utilize rhyme in predetermined patterns as a structural element for particular literary forms, such ballads, sonnets, and rhyming couplets, in various languages, including modern European languages and Arabic.
- Some rhymes have come to be linked with a certain language, culture, or time period, while others have spread to other languages, cultures, or eras.
- Even within the European tradition, structural rhyme is not always used.
- Modern poetry frequently shuns conventional rhyme patterns.
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