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Unlock the art of rhyme with playful techniques inspired by icons like 50 Cent. This guide delves into various types of rhymes, such as end rhyme, internal rhyme, and both exact and approximate rhymes, with examples that bring them to life. Explore alliteration with catchy phrases and discover the magic of onomatopoeia that adds sound to your words. With easy-to-follow rhyme schemes, you’ll learn how to structure your poetry effectively. Embrace your creative side and rhyme it like a pro!
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It’s Rhyme Time Hey, if 50 Cent Could rhyme So can you. That’s Gangsta.
Rhyme Repeating vowel and consonant sounds close together Vowel - a, e, i, o, u Consonant - all other letters
End Rhyme • The rhyming sound comes at the end of a line of poetry. • EX: roses are RED dinosaurs are DEAD
Internal Rhyme • Rhyming sound comes inside a line of poetry • EX: She THREW the SHOE - how RUDE.
Exact Rhyme • Vowels and all rhyming sounds are an exact match • EX roses are RED dinosaurs are DEAD
Approximate Rhyme • Rhyming sounds are similar, but not exact matches • EX: Roses are RED But my true love is HID.
Alliteration • Repetition of similar starting sounds on words close together • EX: Sally sells seashells by… Dumb dinosaurs died dramatically
Onomatopoeia • Words that sound like what they do / are • EX Boom Hush Buzz Hiss Splat Meow
Rhyme Scheme • We label the end rhyme of poems using letters. • Roses are red A • Dinosaurs are dead A • Sugar is sweet B • I can’t believe this heat B