Here’s the latest widely discussed context on limerick rhyme schemes.
- The standard limerick uses an AABBA rhyme scheme, where lines 1, 2, and 5 share a rhyme and lines 3 and 4 share a different rhyme. This is the traditional form and remains the most commonly taught version.[2][5]
- Variants exist in practice, but deviations from AABBA are typically treated as departures from a true limerick. When poets experiment, they often keep the general brisk, humorous tone even if line-length or rhyming is loosened.[5][2]
- Historical notes emphasize that the limerick’s appeal lies in its predictable cadence (anapestic rhythm) and the punch of the final line, which the AABBA pattern helps achieve. Contemporary discussions also highlight short, witty setups in the first two lines followed by a twist in the last line.[6][5]
Illustrative overview:
- Traditional five-line structure: 1-2-5 rhyme together (A), 3-4 rhyme together (B). The typical meter features three stresses in lines 1, 2, and 5 and two stresses in lines 3 and 4.[5][6]
- Common tips for writing: start with a humorous premise in the A-lines, ensure the B-lines provide a quick, lighter resolution, and end with a strong, often comic punch in line 5.[2][6]
If you’d like, I can pull up a few short, well-regarded examples of traditional limericks and annotate how they fit the AABBA pattern.
Sources
Shadow Poetry - A Poet's Writing Resource: Offers Poetry, Comprehensive materials on poetry writing and creation, Haiku, Poetry Dictionary, SP Quill Magazine, White Lotus Magazine, and Educational Tools for learning poets everywhere! A wonderful site to obtain basic information on types of poetry.
www.shadowpoetry.comThe limerick is often comical, nonsensical, and sometimes even lewd form popular in children's li
poets.orgNews overload isn’t all bad; it has forced our industry to get creative. We have excellent new podcasts coming out regularly, young journalists who are taki ...
www.newsmediaalliance.orgLearn the basic structure of a limerick and how to write one. Examine limerick examples from history to modern-day.
study.comMost of his limericks follow a strict scheme which does not only prescribe an invariable rhyme pattern and a strong anapestic rhythm but also a series of verbal formulæ. The first and last lines, in particular, are almost wholly predetermined, except for the geographic place (X), which is sometimes replaced by a physical feature (e.g.
www.nonsenselit.orgDiscover where the limerick form of poetry came from (as far as history knows) and how to craft a proper one yourself.
www.saturdayeveningpost.com