Midword Rhyme

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.

Film
"An even grimmer
 * In The Great Mouse Detective, Ratigan's Villain Song "The World's Greatest Criminal Mind" includes this line:

Plan has been simmer-"

- ing in my great criminal brain!

Music
"Eating an orange
 * Tom Lehrer

While making love

Makes for bizarre enj-

oyment thereof."

"When you attend a funeral
 * Lehrer again:

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..."

"His sense of life and death and good and e-
 * 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.

vil seemed extremely rudimentary"

"Oh, but you're lovely,
 * "The Way You Look Tonight" (originally from the film Swing Time, now a jazz standard):

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."

"I don't want a pickle
 * Arlo Guthrie's "Motorcycle Song" (allegedly written while falling off a cliff after trying to play an acoustic guitar while riding a motorcycle):

Just want to ride on my motor-sickle

And I don't want a tickle

'Cause I'd rather ride on my motor-sickle"

"And 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."

Radio
"Everybody knows ain't nothing rhymes with orange
 * 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:

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"

Theater
"My time is at a premium
 * "In A Little While" from Once Upon a Mattress:

For soon the world will see me a m-

aternal bride-to-be"

"Wipe off that gloomy mask of tragedy
 * Bye Bye Birdie's "Put On a Happy Face":

It's not your style

You'll look so good that you'll be glad ya de-

cided to smile"

"And helping you with your ascent al-"
 * From Wicked:
 * "A Sentimental Man":

- lows me to feel so parental

"Don't be offended by my frank analysis
 * "Popular":

Think of it as personality dialysis

Now that I've chosen to become a pal, a sis-

-ter and adviser

There's nobody wiser"

"When a girl's emergent
 * "Ladies In Their Sensitivities" from Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street:

Probably it's urgent

You differ to her gent-"

- tility, my Lord

"Journey, journey to a spot ex-
 * "Magic to Do" from Pippin:

citing, mystic and exotic

Journey through our anecdotic revue"

"We'd have been left
 * "How I saved Roosevelt" from Assassins contains a mid-letter rhyme, which when written down looks sort of like:

Bereft

Of FD

R"

Western Animation
"Miss Lucy had a steam boat
 * South Park quotes a playground rhyme that combines this with some Inverted Trope Curse Cut Short. Snippet:

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."

Meta
"''When mired in a problem's confusion,
 * Daniel F. Wallace

heed not to the boundary illusion.

So when rhyming with orange,

one has to be more inge-

nious to find a solution.''"