Many poems follow some sort of rhyme scheme—AABBA, ABAB etc. This is generally an end rhyme; the rhyming words come at the end of each successive line. Generally the rhyme ends up even, and each line is a complete phrase, if not a complete sentence.
And then... there are these.
If you write out the poem or lyrics in lines, they will rhyme... so long as you cut words between two lines. Or three, but that would get silly.
Tends to overlap with a Least Rhymable Word, as a way of getting around it (without "chilver" or "doorhinge").
Please note that the word has to be completed for this to work. Otherwise it's an abbreviation, a Curse Cut Short, or a Subverted Rhyme Every Occasion.
This is the extreme form of what is technically known as "enjambment," spreading a phrase or sentence over two lines instead of fitting each thought to its own line.
Examples
- In The Great Mouse Detective, Ratigan's Villain Song "The World's Greatest Criminal Mind" includes this line:
An even grimmerPlan has been simmer--ing in my great criminal brain!
- In The Prince of Egypt, the song "Deliver Us" includes the following line:
Help us now,in this dark hou--r
- In The Hunchback of Notre Dame, "Out There" includes as least three of these. At the start, it has this back and forth between Frollo and Quasimodo:
I am your only friend.You are my one defend--er.
- Later in "Out There," we have this triplet:
Out there, sitting in the sun,Give me one dayOut there, all I ask is one,To hold foreverOut there, where they all live un--aware...- And then still in the same song, there's:
Out there they'll revile you as a monsterOut there they will hate and scorn and jeerWhy invite their calumny and conster-nation? Stay in here- The song "The Bells of Notre Dame" includes another:
Dark was the night when our tale was begunOn the docks near Notre DameFour frightened gypsies slid silently un-der the docks near Notre Dame
- "Happy Working Song" from Enchanted has these lines:
Still, as long as I am hereI guess a new exper-Ience could be worth trying...Hey! Keep drying!
- The song "Marley and Marley" from The Muppet Christmas Carol rhymes "greed" with "needy", "black" with "shackles", and in a cut verse, "part" with "heartless". Since this happens once a verse, it was probably done for artistic purposes.
- Rachel and the Stranger: One of the songs sung by Jim, a woodsman and amateur folk singer.
Greying beard and long her tresses
Knowing not what happiness is
- Alice's Adventures in Wonderland: From the Mock Turtle's poem, "Turtle Soup":
Who would not give all else for two p-
ennyworth only of Beautiful Soup? - Isaac Asimov's "Rejection Slips": "Kind", the third letter, wants to rhyme 'frightfully' with 'delightful', so it sends part of the first word into the same line as the second word.
- The Schmigadoon! number "The Worst Brats In Town":
Miss Codwell: If by chance you're searchin'
For an urchin
I got your merchandise right here
- Daniel F. Wallace's Limerick about rhyming with "orange".
When mired in a problem's confusion,
heed not to the boundary illusion.
So when rhyming with orange,
one has to be more inge-
nious to find a solution.
- Tom Lehrer:
-
Eating an orange
While making love
Makes for bizarre enj—
oyment thereof.- (This rhyme works only because Lehrer sings it in a Boston accent, where the first syllable of orange rhymes with the last syllable of bizarre.)
- The opening to Lehrer's song "We'll All Go Together When We Go":
When you attend a funeral
It is sad to think that sooner or l—
ater those you love will do the same for you...
And you may have thought it tragic
Not to mention other adjec—
tives to think of all the weeping they will do... - The opening to Lehrer's song "Smut"
Smut!
Give me smut and nothing but!
A dirty novel I can't shut,
If it's uncut,
And unsubt—
tle. - "Bright College Days" does this bilingually:
Turn on the spigot,
Pour the beer and swig it,
And gaudeamus igit—
ur.
-
- "The Way You Look Tonight" (originally from the film Swing Time, now a jazz standard):
Oh, but you're lovely,
With your smile so warm
And your cheeks so soft,
There is nothing for m-
e but to love you,
And the way you look tonight. - Arlo Guthrie's "Motorcycle Song" (allegedly written while falling off a cliff after trying to play an acoustic guitar while riding a motorcycle):
I don't want a pickle
Just want to ride on my motor-sickle
And I don't want a tickle
'Cause I'd rather ride on my motor-sickleAnd I don't want to die
Just want to ride on my motorcy... cle.I knew that it wasn't the best song l ever wrote, but I didn't have time to change it. I was comin' down mighty fast. - From the Capitol Steps song "The Hardest Rhyme" (to the tune of "The Longest Time"):
We can't rhyme Yeltsin
We'll have to pull our belts in
Do something else in-
stead of finding rhymes - Gloria Estefan's "Get On Your Feet":
I think it's true
That we've all been through
Some nasty weather
Let's understand
That we're here to han-
dle things together - Alan Jackson's "Like Red on a Rose" has one:
And I love you like only little children love penniesAnd I love you 'cause I know that I can't do any-thing wrong
- The Decemberists' "The Legionnaire's Lament":
Medicating in the sun
Pinched doses of laudanum
Longing for the old fecund-
-ity of my homeland. - Bob Dylan's "Hurricane":
We wanna put his ass in stirWe wanna pin this triple mur--der on him
- Comedian and musician Richard Stilgoe's 45-minute poem Who Pays the Piper?, which humorously outlines the history of music from Pan to the present day, contains a song outlining Chopin's life, set to the Minute Waltz, which contains several of these:
...and went off to Vienna and Berlin,where he met Hummel and Paganin--i the great violin virtuoso.
- And:
She used to smoke cigars,and would habitually wear trous--ers, collar, tie and crew cut hair. - Peter Schickele presented a song based on the name "Mindy", which included the following break:
suffer from a vitamin de-ficiency...
- The Starland Vocal Band's "Afternoon Delight"
Rubbin' sticks and stones together makes the sparks ingiteand the thought of rubbin' you is getting so excit-ing
- "I Will" by Jimmy Wayne:
What can I do? I can't make you stay hereBut if you should choose to go your own way, where--ever you're going, whenever you turnRemember this moment, remember these words
- "Follow Your Arrow" by Kacey Musgraves combines this with a Last-Second Word Swap:
If you save yourself for marriage, you're a boreIf you don't save yourself for marriage, you're a hornote --rible person
- Katy Perry's "Chained To The Rhythm" splits the word "zombie" in two to get an extra rhyme out of it:
Turn it up, it's your favorite songDance, dance, dance to the distortionturn it up, keep it on repeatStumbling around like a wasted zom-bieYeah, we think we're free...
- Plain White T’s “Rhythm Of Love”:
When the moon is lowWe can dance in slow mo-tion
- Runrig's "Scandinavia".
Here we standIn Scand--inavia.
- Reel Big Fish has "Somebody Hates Me"
Did you mis--understand something that I did, orwas it oneof my jokes that you didn't get
- DJ Shadow, "Rocket Fuel"
Aced all quizzes, A-plussed the finalVocals we align' we move it all simul--taneously over joints, we rock
- Big Time Rush's "Love Me Love Me"
Can't stop, wont stop the party rockYou got that feel of you're lips, sweet, like Betty Crock--er, so call a doct--or, 'Cause someone needs to take your temperature, you're getting hot--ter
- Rodgers and Hart's "Manhattan":
Summer journeys to Niag'ra
And to other places aggra-
Vate all our cares
We'll save our fares! - Dan Bull does this in his "Minecraft Nether Zombie Pigman Rap":
Have you ever been aghast at a ghast as it blasts
Burning gas at your ass that could shatter a glass
So attack!
And when the thing disappears,
It can ac-
tually bring you to tears! - Eminem:
- "Who Knew?"
How many retards’ll listen to me?
And run up in the school shooting when they’re pissed at a teach-
er, her, him, is it you, is it them?
"Wasn’t me — Slim Shady said to do it again!"
Damn! How much damage can you do with a pen? - Not strictly a midword rhyme, but "Lose Yourself" breaks up a common phrase to force the rhyme scheme - made very obvious by the pauses in the flow.
But I kept rhymin' and stepped right in the next cypher,
Best believe somebody's payin' the Pied Piper,
All the pain inside amplified by the,
fact that I can't get by with my nine-to,
five... - "Rap God" has another broken-up phrase to force the rhyme:
To meet Run–D.M.C., induct them
Into the motherfuckin' Rock an'...
Roll Hall of Fame... - On "Evil Twin":
Oh, LMFAO, no way, Jo-
-se Baez couldn't beat this rap—O.J., no - "Doomsday Pt. 2" contains a bizarre midword homophone:
Plan a funeral
Imma have to go
Plan a few neurol—
—ogical exams...
- "Who Knew?"
- In the final episode of the first series of Mitch Benn's Crimes Against Music, he and Richard Stilgoe are having a satirical song contest; when Stilgoe challenges Benn to continue the song "I went to the supermarket and there I bought an orange", Mitch melts. But he later comes back:
Everybody knows ain't nothing rhymes with orange
Doesn't matter how much imagination or ing-
enuity you use, even words that are foreign j-
ust better let it go, ain't nothing rhymes with orange
- "In A Little While" from Once Upon a Mattress does this twice:
In a little while, just a little while,
You and I will be one, two, three, four.
In a little while, I will see your smile
On the face of my son. To be for-
Ever hand in glove
Is the way I have it planned[...]
-
My time is at a premium
For soon the world will see me a m-
aternal bride-to-be
- Bye Bye Birdie's "Put On a Happy Face":
Wipe off that gloomy mask of tragedy
It's not your style
You'll look so good that you'll be glad ya de-
-cided to smile - From Wicked:
- "A Sentimental Man":
And helping you with your ascent al-
-lows me to feel so parental- "Popular":
Don't be offended by my frank analysis
Think of it as personality dialysis
Now that I've chosen to become a pal, a sis-
-ter and adviser
There's nobody wiser- Also in "Popular":
There's nothing that can stop you
From becoming popu-
-lar.- Still "Popular":
You're gonna grin and bear it!
Your newfound popularit-
-y!- In both of the latter two "Popular" cases, the ends of the words also rhyme with a different nearby line.
- Frequently in "Defying Gravity":
It's time to try / Kiss me goodbye / Just you and I / I'm flying high
defy-
-ing gravity.- "Thank Goodness"
Then with a jealous squeal
The Wicked Witch burst from conceal-
-ment where she had been lurking surreptitially - "Ladies In Their Sensitivities" from Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street:
When a girl's emergent
Probably it's urgent
You defer to her gent-
-ility, my Lord - Pippin:
- "Magic to Do":
Journey, journey to a spot ex-
citing, mystic and exotic[...]
Intrigue, plots to bring disaster
Humor handled by a master
Romance, sex presented pastor-al-ly - "War is a Science":
And if all the ploys we pick to rea-
-lly work to bring to pass occur
We won't have just a victory
We'll have ourselves a massacre
- "Magic to Do":
- "How I Saved Roosevelt" from Assassins contains a mid-letter rhyme, which when written down looks sort of like:
We'd have been left
Bereft
Of FD
R - "Superstar" from Jesus Christ Superstar:
Did you mean to die like that? Was that a mistake, or
Did you know your messy death would be a record break
-er? - "I Miss The Mountains" from Next to Normal:
All these blank
and tranq-
-uil years
Seems they've dried up all my tears - A Little Night Music:
- "Liaisons" completes a rhyme and a song by having Mme. Armfeldt fall asleep in the middle of a word:
In a world where the kings are employers,
Where the amateur prevails and delicacy fails to pay,
In a world where the princes are lawyers,
What can anyone expect, except to recollect liai... - Carl-Magnus's verse of "A Weekend In The Country" rhymes "item" with "might am(use you)."
- "Night Waltz I (The Sun Won't Set)":
Perpetual sunset
Is rather an unset-
-tling thing.
- "Liaisons" completes a rhyme and a song by having Mme. Armfeldt fall asleep in the middle of a word:
- "It's Hot Up Here" from Sunday in the Park with George:
The outer show
Of bliss up here
Is disappear-
-ing dot by dot - Follies:
- "Love Will See Us Through":
Young Buddy: I've some traits, I warn you,
To which you'll have objections.
Young Sally: I, too, have a cornu-
-copia of imperfections. - "Ah, But Underneath":
As changeable as a chameleon,
With all that entails,
But nobody saw what was really un-
-derneath all the veils.
- "Love Will See Us Through":
- 1776 features several examples, including "Sit Down, John":
It's ninety degrees,
have mercy, John, please!
It's hot as hell,
in Philadel-
-phia!" - Happens often in Hamilton, though it's usually not obvious because, as is common in rap, the structure tends to be pretty flexible and there are a lot of internal rhymes.
- One example from "Alexander Hamilton":
There would've been nothin' left to do for someone less astute
He would've been dead or destitute without a cent of restitut-
-ion!- Another from "My Shot":
I am the A-L-E-X-A-N-D-
E-R! We are! Meant to be!
A colony that runs independently!- And then one from "Satisfied":
I asked about his family, did you see his answ-
-er? His hands started fidgeting, he looked askance:
He's penniless, he's flying by the seat of his pants!- And from "Yorktown (The World Turned Upside Down)":
How did we know that this plan would work?
We had a spy on the inside. That's right: Herc-
ules Mulligan! - The Phantom of the Opera: The Act 2 version of "Notes" provides these lines:
The man could not be deafer,So please prefer--ably one who plays in tune!
- "Where Are The Men?" from Anything Goes:
Where are the men?
Is this a nunnery?
Where are the men?
We want some fun. A re-
-fusal to find some will leave us completely floored... - The Count Of Monte Cristo: "The Story"
Villefort: Let me sign and then initial
Danglars: It's the truth if it's official-
-ly the story. - Oliver!: In the opening number "Food, Glorious Food":
There's not a crust, not a crumb can we find, can we beg, can we borrow, or cadge
But there's nothing to stop us from getting a thrill
When we all close our eyes and i-mag-ine...
- Epic Rap Battles of History has this during the fight between the Wright Brothers and the Mario Brothers.
Luigi: HOW YOU LIKE ME NOW?
Mario: Spit flames out our mouth
Both: Like our name was Bow... SER! - Goldentusk's With Lyrics version of the Halloween theme does this once; perhaps unnecessarily, since the running rhyme of the song is a long E sound.
His sense of life and death and good and e-vil seemed extremely rudimentary
- Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog in "Brand New Day":
This appearedas a mor--al dilemma'cause at firstit was weirdthough I sworeto elimi--nate the worstof the plaguethat devou--ered humanityit's trueI was vagueon the howso how can it bethat you...
- VlogBrothers member Hank Green's song "Strange Charm":
Quarks have electric charge, color charge, mass, and spin
And having color charge means they exist solely in-
side of other kinds of particles and cannot exist alone...
- South Park quotes a playground rhyme that combines this with some Inverted Curse Cut Short. Snippet:
Miss Lucy had a steam boat
The steamboat had a bell,
Miss Lucy went to heaven and the
Steamboat went to...Hell-
o operator- South Park's version, however, is much naughtier than the original playground song. Specifically, mention is made of "cont-aminated water."
- Animaniacs, listing off all the Presidents the US had had at the time:
Ted Roosevelt charged up San Juan HillThen President Taft he got the billIn 1913 Woodrow Wil-son takes us into World War One.
- Milo Murphy's Law has a couple in the rap section of the Season 2 song "Pressure":
We could be so influential,
our actions consequential!
Without any recredentials,
I can tell you confidential-
-ly that you and me might have the quality
to achieve a high degree of notoriety!
And get our names on the marquee of high society
And I know that now we seem like idi-
-ots, but in the nitty-gritty,
it's so fortunate we're witty
it's gonna (Yo, yo!) make us giddy
when we're someday sitting pretty! - Family Guy: "Christmastime is Killing Us" from the episode "Road to the North Pole" features one in every verse but the last, rhyming "peal" and "zeal" with "feeling", "list" and "pissed" with "existence", "elf" and "shelf" with "selflessly", and "train" and "pain" with "draining".