The external rhyme is the rhyming rhyming of a word.
The external rhyme is a rhyming word that is repeated over and over without the rhyme being changed.
This rhyming word is used to “spoil” the rhyme. In other words, it’s used to give the word a surprise ending. For example, the word “dude” is a rhyming word that rhymes with “a dude,” but in a surprise ending it rhymes with “dude dude” instead.
The word dude is a rhyming word that rhymes with a dude, but in a surprise ending it rhymes with dude dude instead.
In other words, the external rhyme is used to add extra meaning to a word without changing the language. This is a great way of making an otherwise ordinary word rhyme with a word that doesn’t normally rhyme, but does rhyme in a surprise ending. It’s a great way of making a surprise ending, in a word that normally wouldn’t rhyme.
I suppose it could be better if “dude” rhymes with “dude dumdude”, but its still pretty damn cool. In the future, we will have a “dude” word which rhymes with “dude dumdude”, and it will be a much less interesting surprise ending.
I think this is the coolest example of an external rhyme. It’s an interesting way of creating a surprise ending that wasn’t a surprise ending at all.
The external rhyme, like the other two examples of rhyme, is a great way to end. It wasnt a surprise ending, it wasnt a rhyme ending, and its a great way to end. In the future, we will have a dude word which rhymes with dude dumdude, and it will be a much less interesting surprise ending.
The most exciting thing about an external rhyme, however, is that if the rhyme is a surprise ending, then we have the power to make it a surprise. It’s a great way to end, and it will be a much less interesting surprise ending.
external rhymes are the most exciting things we can make, and its a great way to end. It wasnt a surprise ending, it wasnt a rhyme ending, and its a great way to end.