Imperfect rhyme
Half rhyme or imperfect rhyme, sometimes called bastard rhyme, near-rhyme, lazy rhyme, or slant rhyme, is a type ofUse in popular music
Rock and punk
In the 1977 song " God Save the Queen" by the English punk rock band the Sex Pistols, the authors create a rhyme with the lines "God save the ''I never thought it would ''happen'' With me and a girl from ''Clapham'' Out on the windy ''common'' That night I ain't ''forgotten''
Hip hop and rap
Half rhyme is often used, along with assonance, in rap music. That can be used to avoid rhyming clichés (e.g., rhyming ''knowledge'' with ''college'') or obvious rhymes and can give the writer greater freedom and flexibility in forming lines of verse. Additionally, some words have no perfect rhyme in English, necessitating the use of slant rhyme. The use of half rhyme may also enable the construction of longer multisyllabic rhymes than is otherwise possible. In the following lines from the song " N.Y. State of Mind" by the rapper Nas, the author uses half rhyme in a complex cross rhyme pattern:And be prosperous, though we live ''dangerous'' Cops could just arrest me, ''blamin' us'', we're held like hostages
Unconventional exceptions
The children's nursery rhyme This Little Piggy displays an unconventional (in most modern dialects) slant rhyme. ''Home'' is rhymed with ''none''. This is because in Early modern English these words often rhymed. In some dialects of Northern English English, these still rhyme.This little piggy stayed (at) ''home''...this little piggy had ''none''.In The Hives' song " Dead Quote Olympics", the singer Howlin' Pelle Almqvist rhymes ''idea'' with ''library'':Archived a
This time you really got something, it's such a clever ''idea'' But it doesn't mean it's good because you found it at the ''libra-ri-a''
See also
* Holorime * Internal rhyme * Monorhyme * Rime richeSources
* Smith, M., Joshi, A. (2020). ''Rhymes in the Flow: How Rappers Flip the Beat''. United States: University of Michigan Press. * ''The Princeton Handbook of Poetic Terms: Third Edition''. (2016). United States: Princeton University Press. * Lasser, M. (2019). ''City Songs and American Life, 1900-1950''. United Kingdom: University of Rochester Press. * Barnes, W. (1854). ''A Philological Grammar: Grounded Upon English, and Formed from a Comparison of More Than Sixty Languages. Being an Introduction to the Science of Grammar and a Help to Grammars of All Languages, Especially English, Latin and Greek''. United Kingdom: J. R. Smith. * Stoker, J. (2015). ''Slant Rhyme''. United Kingdom: Xlibris US.References
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