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  2. Multisyllabic rhymes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multisyllabic_rhymes

    Multisyllabic rapping is mostly included hardcore, gangsta or mafioso rap and is rarely included in mainstream hip-hop music. Examples of multisyllabic rhymes being included in mainstream hip-hop music include rapper AZ's 1995 single "Sugar Hill", Big Pun's 1997 single "Still Not a Player", and Cuban Link's "Sugar Daddy" single from 2005. Some ...

  3. Rapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rapping

    The term MC continued to be used by the children of women who moved to New York City to work as maids in the 1970s. These MCs eventually created a new style of music called hip-hop based on the rhyming they used to do in Jamaica and the breakbeats used in records. MC has also recently been accepted to refer to all who engineer music. [131]

  4. Rhyme scheme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhyme_scheme

    Hip-hop music and rapping's rhyme schemes include traditional schemes such as couplets, as well as forms specific to the genre, [3] which are broken down extensively in the books How to Rap and Book of Rhymes. Rhyme schemes used in hip-hop music include Couplets [4] Single-liners [5] Multi-liners [6] Combinations of schemes [7] Whole verse [8 ...

  5. Off-centered rhyme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-centered_rhyme

    An off-centered rhyme is an internal rhyme scheme characterized by placing rhyming words or syllables in unexpected places in a given line. [1] This is sometimes called a misplaced-rhyme scheme or a spoken-word rhyme style. Here is an example from the hip-hop group De La Soul:

  6. Chopper (rap) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chopper_(rap)

    Chopper is a hip hop music subgenre that originated in the Midwestern United States and features fast-paced rhyming or rapping. [1] [2] Those that rap in the style are known as choppers, and rapping in the style is sometimes referred to as chopping.

  7. Freestyle rap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freestyle_rap

    [7] Myka 9 adds, "back in the day, freestyle was bust[ing] a rhyme about any random thing, and it was a written rhyme or something memorized". [6] Divine Styler says: "in the school I come from, freestyling was a non-conceptual written rhyme... and now they call freestyling off the top of the head, so the era I come from, it's a lot different ...

  8. Hip-hop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip-hop

    In Byron Hurt's documentary Hip Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes, he claims that hip-hop had changed from "clever rhymes and dance beats" to "advocating personal, social and criminal corruption." [ 218 ] Despite the fall in record sales throughout the music industry, [ 219 ] hip-hop had remained a popular genre, with hip-hop artists still regularly ...

  9. Talk:Multisyllabic rhymes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Multisyllabic_rhymes

    Multis (abbreviated) in hip-hop must rhyme more than one sound in each instance, hence the Eminem example in the article (I added that example a year ago). If there is a literary version of multis which allows you to be right, then at least remove the hip-hop examples or make the distinction between the two.