an apple falling out of my butt
i saw a gap
eat thoses apple and thoses butt
in the map
Kick those butts with the bots
In the map there is dam
Were those bots on the foot?
Sure! Here is a short ABAB poem for you:
Sunset’s glow fills the sky so vast (A) Painting colors that will not last (B) Silhouettes dance among the trees (A) As a gentle evening breeze (B)
ABAB ABAB ABAB ABAB is one another one is ABBA CDDC EFFE GHHG you could also have ABAB CDCD EFEF GHGH there can be any pattern also AB CD it just depends on the poem or the type of poem
abab
A narrative poem's rhyme scheme is aabb or abab.
It's rhyme scheme
abab
The poem "Snow in the Suburbs" by Thomas Hardy follows an ABAB rhyme scheme.
The rhyme scheme abab ensures a structured and organized flow in a poem or verse. It creates a pattern of sound that is pleasing to the ear and helps to unify the poem by connecting related ideas. Additionally, the abab rhyme scheme can add a sense of balance and symmetry to the overall composition.
Eg. ............. rock (a) ............. sing (b) ............. knock (a) ............. ring (b)
quatrains
The poem "Scaffolding" by Seamus Heaney follows an ABAB rhyme scheme.
A fourteen line poem written in iambic pentameter with the rhyme scheme abab bcbc cdcd ee is known as a Shakespearean sonnet.
No, the poem "I dwell in Possibility" by Emily Dickinson does not use an abab rhyme scheme. Instead, it uses an ABCB rhyme scheme in each stanza.