Name That Person 1
Name That Person 2
Types of Rhythm
Types of Rhyme 1
Types of Rhyme 2
100

wanted to be in the "Room Where It Happened"

Aaron Burr

100

visionary who realized country needed change to advance

George Washington

100

Name the rhythm = (unstress, stress): “What comes next? You've been freed/do you know how hard it is to lead?

Iambic

100

Rhyme on words that look the same but which are actually pronounced differently – for example “bough” and “rough.”

Eye

100

A two-syllable rhyme, generally used for humorous effect. In “Non-stop,” Hamilton impressively rhymes “amendments” and “independence.”

Feminine/Multisyllabic

200

coordinated a naval blockade that helped win the war

Marquis de Lafayette

200

involved in scandal which led to pamphlet being published

Maria Reynolds

200

Name the rhythm = (stress, unstress, unstress): “Took up a collection just to send him to the mainland.”

Dactylic

200

“Lock up ya daughters and horses, of course/it's hard to have intercourse over four sets of corsets.”

Interwoven

200

“You've been freed/Do you know how hard it is to lead?”

Masculine

300

better match for Hamilton emotionally versus intellectually

Eliza Schuyler

300

was heard by Philip bad-mouthing Hamilton in front of a crowd

George Eacker

300

Name the rhythm = (unstress, unstress, stress): “When are these colonies…

Anapestic

300

In “Guns and Ships,” Lafayette asks, “You wanna fight for your land back?” and the ensemble retort, “You gotta get your right hand man back!”

Identical

300

Rhyming of the final words of lines in a poem. King in “What Comes Next” rhymes “Awesome. Wow” with “Do you have a clue what happens now?”

End

400

says their only job is to marry rich

Angelica Schuyler

400

said a legacy is “planting seeds in a garden you never get to see.”

Alexander Hamilton

400

Name the rhythm = (stress, unstress): “mainland” rhymes with “came, and”

Trochaic

400

Rhyme in which two words share just a vowel sound or just a consonant sound.

Slant

400

In the first Cabinet Battle, Jefferson tells Hamilton, “Our debts are paid, I'm afraid/Don't tax the south because we got it made in the shade.”

Internal

500

“a tailor spyin’ on the British government”

Hercules Mulligan

500

fights the war with words rather than weapons

Thomas Jefferson

500

Name the rhythm = (stress stress): “Outgunned! Outmanned!”

Spondaic

500

“The best thing he can do for the revolution is turn n’/go back to plantin’ tobacco in Mount Vernon.”

Hidden/Concealed

500

Rhyme using homophones (two different words that sound the same) like “new since” and “nuisance” as Hamilton does in “The Addams Administration.”

Rich