(of poetry or verses) having the same rhyme in each line
monorhyme in American English
(ˈmɑnəˌraim)
noun
Prosody
a poem or stanza in which all the lines rhyme with each other
Word origin
[1725–35; mono- + rhyme]This word is first recorded in the period 1725–35. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: amorphous, collapse, copyright, pantheism, viburnummono- is a combining form meaning “alone,” “single,” “one” (monogamy); specialized in some scientific terms to denote a monomolecular thickness (monolayer) and adapted in chemistry to apply to compounds containing one atom of a particularelement (monohydrate). Other words that use the affix mono- include: monobuoy, monocoque, monograph, monosome, monounsaturated
Examples of 'monorhyme' in a sentence
monorhyme
Persian ghazals employ a wide variety of quantitative metres and a monorhyme.