Now never while I live Shall we twain love together any more Nor sit at rhyme as we were used to do, Nor each kiss other only with the eyes A great way off ere hand or lip could reach; There is no way.
In the verse he will try to awaken an enjoyment of rhyme and of meter, of any specially musical collocation of words, of instances of tone-color or other poetic harmony.
This is true of all kinds of rhyme, but of course it is the regular terminalrhyme that most children notice and enjoy and remember.
He had learnt the doggerel rhyme by heart, even though the English tongue was quite unfamiliar to him.
Of a truth she could not read its contents, for they were writ in English in the form of a doggerel rhyme which caused Chauvelin to utter a savage oath.
This was the absurd old nursery rhyme with which la Svengali chose to make her début before the most critical audience in the world!
I composed that rhyme while I was lying on the death platform up there.
I don't know why, but this fact of the Devil's expressing himself in rhyme was peculiarly trying to me.
The delight of the lesson will be greatly enhanced where the reader lends to the rhyme of the poet the music of his voice.
The child of two years of age will give his attention to the rhythm of the nursery rhyme when the prose story will not interest him.
Anglo-Saxon poetry depended for its pleasantness to the ear, not on rhyme as does ours, but on accent and alliteration.
Chaucer used this kind of verse, but because King James used it too, and used it so well, it came to be called the Rhyme Royal.
At times, too, Layamon has neither rhyme nor alliteration in his lines, sometimes he has both, so that his poem is a link between the old poetry and the new.
It was like Chaucer's stanza of seven lines, called the Rhyme Royal, with two lines more added.
How the name and song of this happiest of earthly birds run through all the rhyme and romance of English poetry, of English rural life, ever since there was an England!
Perhaps, indeed, the rhyme has been fabricated long since the name by some one who did not think of such niceties.
There is something inconsistent with the popish episcopal character in the childish rhyme with which Bishop Barnabee is thrown up and dismissed when he happens to light on any one's hand.
I fall into the claws of Time: But lasts within a leaved rhyme All that the world of me esteems - My withered dreams, my withered dreams.
In leaved rhymelies safe, I deem, Sheltered and shut in a nook of rhyme, From the reaper man, and his reaper Time.
This is a better rhyme even than Butler's "Their dispensations had been stifled But for our Adoniram Byfield.
Once a writer named Macaulay said he could make a rhyme for any word in the English language, and a man replied, 'You can't rhyme Timbuctoo.
Therefore, pray, Whatever I may chance to rhyme about, Read it without the shadow of a doubt.
In a sad blueness beyond rhyme It ends: sense, without thought, can pass No stadium further.
Grammar In Rhyme Three little words we often see, And Article, a, an, the.
The child knows nothing of correct metre: as long as there is a jingling rhyme it is satisfied.
For rhyme the rudder is of verses, With which, like ships, they steer their courses.
Thomson, void of rhyme as well as reason, How could'st thou thus poor human nature hum?
They respond to it as quickly as we do, though they have to forego the rhyme and the metre.
Yet it is a more natural means of expressing one's emotions than rhyme or metre.
It is easier there than in English because of the facility for rhyme in these languages, and because the improvisers usually composed in rhymed prose and were not hampered by metre.
A] He fashioned the form consciously, that is the rhyme and metre.
It should be, Do these writers cease being poets when they use the fetters of rhyme and metre, or are they with those fetters greater poets than they were in their novels.
Rhyme is natural to the Arabic language, whereas it is really foreign to the English language.
So when we hear people say that they do not care for poetry we see that they mean they have an aversion to verse in metre or rhyme or rhythm.
He may have taken the firstrhyme that came to his head but he had also to consider his metre.
I'll rhymeyou so eight years together, dinners, and suppers, and sleeping hours, excepted.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "rhyme" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.