Rhyming Names

Here is a list of names with definitions in rhyme.

Amphisbaenic: The last syllable is the same but in reverse order:

Apocopated: two rhyming words with syllables of a word, a syllable, where the first syllable of the first word is pronounced. (The opposite of rhyme rear):

Similarity: The similarity of vowels:

Also: A few words with the second additional enhanced by aConsonants:

Start: the first words of lines rhyme:

Broken: Includes breaks the last word of a line to their internal sound pair in a rhyme:

Consonant: When the last consonant of the two words are the same but the vowel in front of them is different:

Ongoing: If two color matched side by side in a single line:

Double consonant: where the last two consonantsare the same:

Echo: the last syllables in a row, followed by an echo in the words themselves, but change their meaning:

Skipped: in this case the pairs of rhyming to be perfect otherwise, but one of the words is different in non-voice found in:

Women (double): occurs when two syllables, rhyming in succession:

Half-room: this is the last stressed syllable of a word rhymes with the firststressed syllable of the second:

Homophone: these are words that sound the same but spelled differently:

Identity: These are rhymes, repetition of the same word:

Internal Rhymes: This sounds similar lines appear in:

Lion: If a word in a row and end in the same line rhyme:

Light (weakened): The rhyming syllable is stressed and not stressed inOthers:

Connected: This is the same or similar sounds at the end of a row and back to the beginning of the next line:

Male: This is the last syllable rhyming pairs are underlined:

Mosaic: Where a single word with more syllables, rhyming words is two or more, as in rhymes end of the two following lines from WAS Gilbert's song "Modern Major General"

Para: ThisIt is when the first and last consonants are the same, but the vowels are different:

grams Para: This technique is the modification of a rhyming word for targeted action:

Perfect: These are words where the vowel and consonant following a stressed syllable are identical in sound, even if written differently:

Vista (eye): This only visually rhyming word pairs:

Slant: in this caserhyming not quite:

Subtractive: This is when you remove a consonant after the vowel.

Trailing: This is to emphasize a syllable word rhyming with the first syllable of a word or two on the first syllable of two words, where the first syllable of the second word is:

Triple: This is where all the three-syllable word pairs rhyme.

Unstressed: the last syllable of a word is being downloaded.

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