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How to use rhymed in a sentence

Looking for sentences and phrases with the word rhymed? Here are some examples.

Sentence Examples
Sonnet 126 is, unusually, a poem in six rhymed couplets rather than a sonnet proper.
His four-line verses or quatrains, each of two rhymed couplets, were written in groups of 100, known as Centuries.
From the point of view of adequacy, it makes no difference whether we have before us a prose poem or rhymed verse.
My rationale was, if you can enunciate densely rhymed verse, and understand the syntax, you can speak the language.
The following weekend I burned the midnight oil translating one of the eclogues into rhymed couplets for the following week.
It is written in rhymed tetrameters, the most artless of English metres and quite unlike the majestic blank verse of Prospero the magician.
Lefevere, though, very simply overstates the case regarding the relative function and desirability of rhymed, metrical translation.
Boccaccio's poem, a pastoral romance in rhymed octaves, has been aptly described as a hymn to nature.
Meyer's version employs a spare free verse that is very Ibsenish, even though Ibsen composed here in rhymed octosyllables!
They used to offer their supplications before these deities in rhymed prose and sought revelation.
While most sonnets conform to the usual rules of prosody, with their decasyllables and 14 rhymed lines, there are exceptions throughout the set.
The participant was asked if another word rhymed or sounded like the target word.
Employees dubbed it The Room of Doom, just because the two words rhymed, and it sounded threatening.
He brought in stacks of plain and emphatically rhymed popular poems copied from newspaper columns and asked us what we thought of them.
Crucially, while her written poems rhymed, her BSL translations did not, because BSL differs from English in grammatical structure.
The poem was long, compared to most of the Egyptian poems I've read, and rhymed.
In the original languages, the ghazal is a highly rhymed form, but the English version as we know it now refuses the rhyming couplet.
The Dong Song is a chanted rhymed poem, marked by an abundance of striking metaphors.
Weatherford's poems are mostly rhymed and each is accompanied by a striking vintage photo or illustration.
Most rap still follows the initial formula of rhymed couplets that casually mix full rhyme with assonance.
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Examples from Classical Literature
The stanza consists of four rhymed lines, in any rhyme scheme, with the last two repeated.
He had the tin milk pan hung on him like a shield, because it rhymed with man.
All these poems are written in decasyllabic rhymed verse, with varied arrangement of the rhymes.
In versification Hunts aim was to bring back into use the earlier form of the rhymed English decasyllabic or heroic couplet.
And, when the prayers rhymed, how exhilarating it was to lay stress on each rhyme and double rhyme, shouting them fervidly.
Let poets of old days be compared with poets of new, classics with romantics, rhymed with unrhymed.
In The Tempest, one of his last plays, we find 1458 unrhymed and only two rhymed five-foot lines.
And then these extra prayers were printed so prettily, they rhymed so profusely.
And then I had to stop, because it ought to have been Laura, and Laure wouldn't have rhymed.
Two of its species, the rhymed heroic play and the rehandling of Shakespeare Tragedy.
He had learnt his craft at the school of Alexander Pope, and he wrote moral stories in rhymed couplets.
The name was Irene, but I put in yours because it rhymed so well.
Mr. Crabbe continued to write moral stories in rhymed couplets.
The reader will perceive that these slovakian songs are rhymed.
Their names I once rhymed for some children of my acquaintance.
He found a rhymed and pictured chap-book greatly to his liking.
There is a set of rhymed rules for the doing of even this trifling act.
Here be rhymed truth, at least, which can boast of not being poetry.
The first stanza of rhymed iambic sestets indicates that imagination and machinery have fused disturbingly, even that the loom has become the maker of dreams.
Much like the alternating themes of antipathy and adjustment, Clive Watkins's extensive range of style vacillates between rhymed verse and unrhymed prose.
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