Extended rhyme

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Extended rhyme is a general term in verse for forms of rhyme in which syllables before the last stressed syllable also have phonetic correspondences. Specific forms are:

Double rhyme

Rhyme from the penultimate and the last stressed syllable. Example from Clemens Brentano :

The Abendw inde w go ,
I have to go to L inde g go , [...]

Shaking rhyme

Double rhyme with two initial sounds or groups of sounds that change places. Example from Heinz Erhardt

He choked a class apper schl ang '
to their rattling schl apper kl nes

Multiple rhymes

Rhyme with two or more stressed syllables, i.e. generalization of the double rhyme. A corresponding extension of the rhyme to three or even more syllables can be found above all in the genre of rap . Using the example of Eins Zwos "Word on it" (with Samy Deluxe and Falk):

One reason why the beats were fatter at the Waterkant . Your sound depends on the fatherland like war veterans!

Vowel half-rhyme

Rhyme with the last stressed and the following, unstressed syllable, so a weakening compared to the double rhyme. Example from Hermann Hesse ( Im Nebel ):

Full of friends was the world to me,
as yet my life l maybe w ar ,
Now that the fog falls,
is no more s maybe b ar .

Touching rhyme

Combination of end rhyme and consonance : Also rhymes with the initial sound of the rhyme syllable, i.e. the consonants before the vowel of the accented rhyme syllable also sound the same. - Special cases:

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Clemens Brentano: Works. Edited by Wolfgang Frühwald u. a. Volume 1. Hanser, Munich 1968, p. 567 .
  2. Heinz Erhardt: Schwänke out of the blue. In: The great Heinz Erhardt book. Torch bearer, Lingen 1970, p. 222.