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Grade 9/ English/ Rhyme & Rhyme Scheme
Beehive · Poems · NCERT Class 9

Rhyme & Rhyme Scheme

Rhyme is when two words share the same end sound — “night” and “light”. A rhyme scheme is the pattern those end-rhymes make across the lines, written with letters such as abab or aabb. The big idea: a rhyme scheme is labelled by sound, not spelling. Every example here is original; we only borrow the name of the Beehive poem ‘Rain on the Roof’, whose soft, repeated sounds make the rain feel musical. Tap each term to see what it means.

👥 3 topics⏱ ~20 min📝 12-question quiz
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The language of rhyme

Every musical poem is built from a few simple ideas. Tap each term to see what it does and how rhyme, scheme, couplets, stanzas and rhythm fit together to give a poem its sound.

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The three big ideas

  • Rhyme — two words with the same end sound. night / light, rain / train, sky / high. The match is in the sound, not the spelling.
  • End rhyme — rhyme that falls at the ends of lines. This is the rhyme we use to find a poem’s scheme.
  • Rhyme scheme — the pattern of end-rhymes, written with letters. The first end sound is a, the next new sound is b, and so on. Lines that rhyme get the same letter.
  • Two common patternsaabb means lines rhyme in pairs (line 1 with 2, line 3 with 4); abab means they alternate (line 1 with 3, line 2 with 4).

Worked example. Four lines end in the words cat / hat / sun / fun. What is the rhyme scheme?

cat — first end sound, so label it a.

hat — rhymes with “cat”, so it is the same letter: a.

sun — a new end sound, so it becomes b.

fun — rhymes with “sun”, so it is b too. The pattern is a a b b → aabb (two couplets).

  • Couplettwo consecutive lines that rhyme. Its rhyme scheme is aa. The morning sky was clear and blue, / The grass was wet with silver dew. (“blue” / “dew” → aa.)
  • Stanza — a group of lines set apart by a blank line, like a paragraph in prose. A poem can have many stanzas of two, three, four or more lines.
  • Each stanza can have its own scheme — a four-line stanza (a quatrain) often follows aabb or abab, and the same pattern usually repeats in every stanza.
  • Why it matters — splitting a poem into stanzas groups ideas together, and the rhyme scheme inside each stanza is what gives it a clear, repeating shape.
  • End rhyme — the rhyme is at the ends of lines. I watched the train / move through the rain. (“train” / “rain”.)
  • Internal rhyme — the rhyme is inside a single line. The cat sat flat upon the mat. (“cat”, “sat”, “flat”, “mat” all chime within one line.)
  • Rhythm — the beat of the poem, the regular tap-tap you feel when you read it aloud. Rhythm comes from stressed and unstressed sounds, not from rhyme.
  • Together they singrhyme + rhythm are what make a poem musical: rhyme matches the sounds, and rhythm keeps the beat.
Common mistake: a rhyme scheme is labelled by SOUND, not spelling. Words can look alike yet not rhyme — “love” and “move” share four letters but end in different sounds (luv / moov), so they do not rhyme. Always say the words aloud and listen, never just compare how they are written.

Where you'll meet it

Rhyme & rhyme scheme, at work

Appreciating songs & poems

Once you can hear rhyme and trace a scheme, songs and poems open up. You notice why a chorus sticks in your head, how a couplet snaps an idea shut, and how a steady rhythm carries a verse forward. Naming the pattern — aabb here, abab there — turns a vague “it sounds nice” into something you can actually explain.

Writing a short rhyme

Knowing the patterns lets you write your own. Pick a scheme — say aabb — choose four end words that rhyme in pairs (day / play, night / bright), and build each line up to them. Keep a steady beat as you read it back, and you have a neat little verse, greeting-card couplet or birthday rhyme of your own.

Check yourself

Competency quiz

Modelled on the competency-based pattern — MCQ, assertion–reason and a case study, testing whether you can use the ideas, not just recall them.

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Skill practice with original examples. The poem “Rain on the Roof” (NCERT Beehive) is referenced, not reproduced.

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