Is it a rhyme if it the same word

Although ‘game’ and ‘game’ is an identical rhyme, because it is the same sound, I think this would be ABAB as you suggest.

You are also right that the second example would be XAXA. Nico is right that you could also write this ABCB; both are valid. Because X is a special notation for an unrhymed line, you might choose XAXA for clarity, particularly for longer stanzas. I prefer it, because you can immediately see which lines are rhymed, and which are not, without having to remember each letter and see if it has been used twice.

In terms of rules, I think it is common for the rhyme scheme to be separate for each stanza. A poem may follow an ABAB scheme throughout, so it is simpler to write ABAB ABAB ABAB, rather than ABAB CDCD EFEF. If there is a more complex overarching rhyme scheme which connects the stanzas, you might choose to use one scheme overall, e.g. ABAB CDCD ABAB CD AB.

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Natalialexandra

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∙ 11y ago


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Not exactly. If the word, take the word «turn» for example. If you take the word turn and look up the definition, there are many different ones. Take this sentence and make sense of it: Will I get my turn to drive at the turn? two different meanings. My idea of the same word rhyming is no.

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Q: Do words rhyme if they are the same word?

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I. What is Rhyme?

Rhymes are words whose endings match, as in “fly” and “spy.” This is one of the most common techniques in traditional poetry and music, and most people can easily identify rhymes.

II. Types of Rhyme

Perfect Rhyme

This is the “true,” classic rhyme. The sounds match exactly:

Sky/fly

Knowledge/college

Coincide/go inside

Slant-Rhyme or Imperfect Rhyme

In a slant-rhyme, the words sound pretty similar, but may not rhyme exactly. Usually, slant-rhymes have the same vowel sounds and similar consonant sounds, but there are exceptions:

  • Hide/mind
  • Sweaty/Heavy
  •  Inner/Banner

Identical Rhyme

When you use the same word twice, it’s an identical rhyme. Generally, audiences kind of see this as cheating, and it can make your lines sound repetitive. It’s usually best to avoid identical rhymes if you can.

III. Examples and Explanation

Example 1

Red sky in the morning: sailors take warning

Red sky at night: sailors’ delight

Here’s an example of a rhyme being used as a mnemonic to help people remember information. This popular rhyme is based on the fact that a red sunrise often indicates that bad weather is coming, while a red sunset can indicate that the bad weather has passed. Of course, this isn’t always correct, but it works well enough to be worth remembering – generations of sailors have memorized this short rhyme to help them predict the weather while at sea.

Example 2

Shaquille O’Neal, a man whose name is already a rhyme, starred in a 1997 movie called Steel.

Example 3

Roses are red, violets are blue, something something bacon.

This is a classic setup for a rhyme, and people have heard it so many times that they are strongly expecting the rhyme to be carried through at the end. However, when strong expectations like this are violated, it can often produce laughter, as in the case of this humorous Valentine’s Day card.

IV. The Importance of Rhyme

Rhyming is very popular, and always has been, but no one is entirely sure why. One possibility, of course, is that we simply like the sound of them! Rhymes are very pleasing to the ear, and their prominence in human literature may be based on that simple fact alone.

But rhymes also have another advantage, which is that they make information easier to remember. Put yourself in the position of a storyteller in the ancient world, centuries before the invention of writing. Your job is to tell the stories passed down in your culture from generation to generation, but you can’t read them out of a book. So how can you remember all those stories? In nearly all societies, the answer has been: you make a rhyme. Thanks to the mnemonic power of rhyme, societies without writing have managed to preserve their oral traditions for generation upon generation.

Although rhymes were extremely important in traditional poetry, their importance has waned in recent decades due to the rise of free verse. Free verse does not necessarily rhyme, and is supposed to be far more open to the author’s creativity than the rhyming verse-forms of traditional poetry. In fact, rhyming is so far out of fashion in the poetry world that many poetry teachers have come to see it as nothing more than a distraction – they even go as far as to ban students from using rhymes in their poetry, at least until they have learned other skills.

Although rhymes are no longer a major part of poetry, they were essential to the poetic traditions of prior centuries, and so a full understanding of poetry cannot be achieved without an understanding of rhyme.

V. Examples in Literature

Example 1

I love to hear her speak, yet well I know

That music hath a far more pleasing sound;

I grant I never saw a goddess go;

My mistress, when she walks, treads on the ground:

And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare 

As any She belied with false compare.

(William Shakespeare – Sonnet 130)

The Sonnet is one of the most famous traditional poetic forms, and Shakespeare was its undisputed master. Every sonnet ends with a rhyming couplet (the last two lines), which is supposed to sum up the “point” of the poem. In this case, Shakespeare is poking fun at the way poets tend to exaggerate their lovers’ beauty, when really they should be acknowledging that love flourishes best when people are realistic about one another.

Example 2

The road goes ever on and on,

Down from the door where it began.

Now far ahead the road as gone

And I must follow if I can.

(J.R.R. Tolkien – The Lord of the Rings)

Tolkien loved to write poems and songs for his various characters in Middle Earth, and most of them had pretty complex rhymes. This one, though, is supposed to be a simple folk song, so its rhymes are quite simple. The only complication is a little internal slant-rhyme in the first line (road/goes).

VI. Examples in Popular Culture

Example 1

Maybe I’m lost in the grind, haunted by all I desire

Forcibly caused to be normal, bonded and tossed in the fire.

(El-P – Oh Hail No)

These lines end with a simple, perfect rhyme with desire/fire. In between, though, there are a host of internal slant-rhymes, such as lost/caused/tossed, haunted/bonded, and the word “grind,” which is a slant-rhyme for desire/fire.

Example 2

No one’s been (like Gaston) a Kingpin (like Gaston)!

No one’s got a swell cleft in his chin (like Gaston)!

As a specimen yes, I’m intimidating!

My what a guy, that Gaston!

(Disney’s Beauty and the Beast)

The rhymes in Disney songs are often remarkably intricate. This short verse has several perfect rhymes in the first two lines (been-pin-chin), plus the identical rhyme of “Gaston” that occurs at the end of nearly every line. There’s also an incredible internal rhyme in the third line that could be easily overlooked: specimen/yes I’m in-.

VII. Similar Devices

Rhyme Scheme

Rhyme scheme is the pattern of rhymes in a poem or song. There are a potentially infinite number of rhyme schemes, and all of them are described using a sequence of letters such as ABAC or AABBCC. Each letter corresponds to a single line, and lines sharing the same letter are the ones that rhyme. So, ABCD would be a four-line poem in which none of the lines rhyme. AAAA would be a four-line poem in which all the lines rhyme with one another. And ABAB would be a four-line poem in which every other line rhymes. (You can find more musical concepts in musicaldictionary.com)

Internal Rhyme

Usually, rhymes occur at the end of the line. But you can also have rhymes within a line, and in these cases they’re called “internal” rhymes. Rap lyrics tend to be very dense with internal rhymes, especially the work of Eminem:

Make me king, as we move toward a new world order

A normal life is boring, but superstardom’s close to post mortem

These two lines end with a slant-rhyme, but Eminem’s delivery makes the words seem closer in sound than the ordinarily would. Notice, though, how many internal rhymes (or slant-rhymes) there are in just these two lines. All the underlined words are very close to one another in sound, which contributes to the percussive quality of Eminem’s music.

We’ve got 53 rhyming words for same »

What rhymes with same?
seɪmsame

This page is about the various possible words that rhymes or sounds like same.
Use it for writing poetry, composing lyrics for your song or coming up with rap verses.

Most common words emphasized in bold.

Translation

Find a translation for same in other languages:

mismo

même

वही

stesso

ಅದೇ

اسی

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Popularity rank by frequency of use

How popular is same among other rhymes?

Word Cloud

A graphical representation of the words that rhyme with same.

5/5,648 songs found

see 5,643 more »

  1. Put it on him now, he will never be the same
    Tatted on my ass cause I really like the pain
    He nutted on my butt, I said «I’m glad that you came«

  2. Almost say my name?
    ‘Cause let’s be honest
    We kinda do sound the same

  3. I have never been the same
    Intelligent eyes in a hunger-pang frame

  4. We gone rob the game
    They gang, we gang
    But they are not the same

  5. Or he’ll say he’s just not the same
    And you’ll begin to wonder why you came

5/1,255 poems found

see 1,250 more »

  1. Pointing out the way we came,
    -Every one of them the same

  2. Slumber like death I could awake the same
    As I was once, and lavish without shame

  3. As foam from a ship’s swiftness, when there came
    A voice out of the deep: I will record the same.

  4. If you can think—and not make thoughts your aim,
    If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
    And treat those two impostors just the same:.

  5. But the Woman that God gave him, every fibre of her frame
    Proves her launched for one sole issue, armed and engined for the same,

How to say same in sign language?


How to pronounce same?

Citation

Use the citation below to add this rhymes to your bibliography:

Know what rhymes with same? Have another rhyming word for same? Let us know!

Is same wrong or has spelling mistakes?

Rhyming Dictionary! Feedback?

Find Rhymes

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Filter Results

Welcome to the Rhyme Finder! This rhyming dictionary allows users to explore rhymes for any given word. This includes rhymes based on syllables, near rhymes, and more.

How to use the rhyming dictionary

Enter your «starter» word in the FIND RHYMES input box, and click search. It’s really that simple! We separate perfect rhymes (near the top) from the imperfect rhymes (toward the bottom). In your rhyming results, colors descend based on the best rhyme. Once the color changes, you will notice the results reset back into alphabetical order. Click on any of the results for the word’s definition, part of speech, use in Scrabble, and more. Please note that many of our results are proper nound or slang. While we may not store definitions for all of these words, we can direct you to the Google results for that word.

Perfect Rhymes

Perfect rhymes are just what they sound like. No pun intended! Think of perfect rhymes as words which definitively rhyme. Words that most people would not question. Here are some examples:

  • Cat and Hat
  • Head and Red
  • Egg and Beg
  • Soap and Hope
  • True and Blue

Imperfect Rhymes

Near rhymes, otherwise known as imperfect rhymes, are words that sound the same but are not perfect rhymes. Having trouble deciding if a word is a perfect or imperfect rhyme? Here are some examples:

  • Cat and Bad
  • Head and Mud
  • Egg and Peck
  • Soap and Chap
  • True and Cure

Using Rhymes

Rhymes are most useful in creating lyrics, but they can also be used as a tool to memorize. It is a powerful mnemonic device. This is why song lyrics can be so easy to remember! It’s also why rhymes are a great study tool for memorizing! Use this tool to help write poetry, win rhyme games, write a rap song, create lyrics, and expand your vocabulary!
Rhyming is very important in music because it creates a rhythm that further creates meaning, emotion, and feeling. It also creates an echo in the lyrics. With children, rhyming is a very important tool. Rhyming teaches children how language works, helps them understand the rhythm of language, and learn how to make predictions. In other words, rhymes teach children phrases to anticipate and rhymes enhance their memory. Within all contexts, rhyming is helpful in expanding your imagination no matter if you’re a child or an adult.

When creating lyrics, there are five types of rhymes to choose from.

  • End rhymes: rhyming of the final word of a line
  • Internal rhymes: rhyming of two words within the same line
  • Slant rhymes: near rhymes
  • Identical rhymes: use the same word at the end of each line
  • Eye rhymes: look like they rhyme but sound different

Different Types of Rhymes

  • Mascline rhymes: have a stressed syllable
  • Feminine rhymes: have a stressless syllable.

Ready for a challenge? Try to come up with rhymes for these surprising words that just aren’t very rhymy. Check them with our dictionary! Examples of tough rhymes:

  • Month
  • Silver
  • Bulb
  • Wolf
  • Husband
  • Walrus
  • Orange

Rhyming Dictionary


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