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Rhyme

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About 1 pages (120 words)
Rhyme Summary

Type of echoing produced by the close placement of two or more words with similarly sounding final syllables.

Rhyme is used in poetry (and occasionally in prose) to produce sounds that appeal to the ear and to unify and establish a poem's stanzaic form. End rhyme (i.e., rhyme used at the end of a line to echo the end of another line) is most common, but internal rhyme (occurring before the end of a line) is frequently used as an embellishment. Types of “true rhyme” include masculine rhyme, in which the two words end with the same vowel-consonant combination (stand/land); feminine rhyme (or double rhyme), in which two syllables rhyme (profession/discretion); and trisyllabic rhyme, in which three syllables rhyme (patinate/latinate).

This is the complete article, containing 120 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page).

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    Oblique Rhyme
    n. See half-rhyme.... more

    Off Rhyme
    n, See half-rhyme.... more


     
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    Rhyme from Encyclopedia Brittanica. ©2009 Encyclopedia Brittanica. All rights reserved.

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