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3 thoughts on “how to critique rhyming children’s poems”
Chowder, roof and orange…you can add ‘family’ which is sometimes two syllables (fam-lee) and sometimes three (fam-uh-lee). Best to avoid those tough words altogether!
Hi,
I was just wondering if it’s possible to change the rhythm of the poem mid way, to sort of indicate a change in the story line. If you do that, do you have to alert the reader in some way?
Like, could you put an, “Until…” between the two stanzas where the change occurs? Or is that unecessary? Or is it just never okay to change the rhythm?
Thanks for your time,
Jen
Hi there! ‘shore’ and ‘saw’ rhyme perfectly in Australian, New Zealand and many regional English accents. 🙂
Chowder, roof and orange…you can add ‘family’ which is sometimes two syllables (fam-lee) and sometimes three (fam-uh-lee). Best to avoid those tough words altogether!
Hi,
I was just wondering if it’s possible to change the rhythm of the poem mid way, to sort of indicate a change in the story line. If you do that, do you have to alert the reader in some way?
Like, could you put an, “Until…” between the two stanzas where the change occurs? Or is that unecessary? Or is it just never okay to change the rhythm?
Thanks for your time,
Jen
Hi there! ‘shore’ and ‘saw’ rhyme perfectly in Australian, New Zealand and many regional English accents. 🙂