Proximate rhyme ... that was the word we were looking for. Thank you, John. Thanks for kudos on the digital art ... this one took a lot of overlaying to get it to work:):):)Lions were definitely the image of the night and maybe tomorrow too:)
Pryde studied artsy-fartsy stuff in college. And, from what I can tell, a lot of it. I was being shot at in the desert. There's no excuse for her not knowing a "proximate rhyme" when she sees one. Especially since she used three! Who can we report this to?
I lost the title and not the how-to. I'm awful with names but have a great memory for faces. I should let you know ... I studied a great deal more than the artsy-fartsy. I simply received letters after my name for the artsy fartsy.
Proximate rhyme ... that was the word we were looking for. Thank you, John. Thanks for kudos on the digital art ... this one took a lot of overlaying to get it to work:):):)Lions were definitely the image of the night and maybe tomorrow too:)
Hemingway would love us :)
I think we would go wonderfully with a daiquiri and some Cuban sun:)
@johnjgeddes,
Pryde studied artsy-fartsy stuff in college. And, from what I can tell, a lot of it. I was being shot at in the desert. There's no excuse for her not knowing a "proximate rhyme" when she sees one. Especially since she used three! Who can we report this to?
I lost the title and not the how-to. I'm awful with names but have a great memory for faces. I should let you know ... I studied a great deal more than the artsy-fartsy. I simply received letters after my name for the artsy fartsy.
@prydefoltz,
Easy lioness ... at least you forgot it, I'd never heard of it. Although giving the phenomenon a name doesn't explain the effect.
The "effect" requires "pattern recognition" ... meter, rhythm, rhyme, alliteration, assonance are all patterns ... what pattern was recognized?
@johnjgeddes, feel free to chime in too.
You got it:)