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Encyclopedia > Eye rhyme

Eye rhyme is a similarity in spelling between words that are pronounced differently and hence, not an auditory rhyme. An example is the pair slaughter and laughter.


Many older English poems, particularly those written in Middle English or written in The Renaissance, contain rhymes that were originally true or full rhymes, but as read by modern readers they are now eye rhymes because of shifts in pronunciation. An example is prove and love. Middle English is the name given by historical linguistics to the diverse forms of the English language spoken between the Norman invasion of 1066 and the mid-to-late 15th century, when the Chancery Standard, a form of London-based English, began to become widespread, a process aided by the... By Region: Italian Renaissance Northern Renaissance -French Renaissance -German Renaissance -English Renaissance The Renaissance was a great cultural movement which brought about a period of scientific revolution and artistic transformation, at the dawn of modern European history. ... The Great Vowel Shift was a major change in the pronunciation of the English language that took place in the south of England between 1200 and 1600. ...


Other eye rhymes:

  • height : weight
  • sew : blew, hew, new, crew, dew, few,
  • brow, now, how, plow, wow : sow, crow, mow, row, slow, show,
  • said  : laid, paid,
  • read : dead (however, in the past tense read does rhyme with dead)
  • their : weir
  • dough : rough, tough, enough
  • rouge : gouge
  • fiend : friend
  • daughter : laughter
  • hubris : debris
  • derange : orange
  • rugged : drugged
  • love : prove
  • rain : again
  • good : food

  Results from FactBites:
 
Guide to Verse Forms - Rhyme (2556 words)
Another form of internal rhyme has a word in the middle of one line rhyming with the the word at the end of a different line; this is sometimes called cross rhyme - which is liable to be confused with cross-rhyme, a particular kind of 4-line stanza.
One particular form of cross rhyme, in which the word at the end of one line rhymes with a line in the middle of the next, is common in Irish poetry, where it is known as aicill rhyme.
Rhyming a word in the middle of one line with a word in the middle of another is called interlaced rhyme.
Eye rhyme - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (107 words)
Eye rhyme is a similarity in spelling between words that are pronounced differently and hence, not an auditory rhyme.
Many older English poems, particularly those written in Middle English or written in The Renaissance, contain rhymes that were originally true or full rhymes, but as read by modern readers they are now eye rhymes because of shifts in pronunciation.
This page was last modified 03:31, 23 March 2006.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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