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.
Play with it
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.
Learn
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).
Where you'll meet it
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.
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
Modelled on the competency-based pattern — MCQ, assertion–reason and a case study, testing whether you can use the ideas, not just recall them.
Skill practice with original examples. The poem “Rain on the Roof” (NCERT Beehive) is referenced, not reproduced.
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