What is the name of this lyrical rhyming technique?

So I was listening to my favourite piece of music - Lisa Minelli’s version of ‘Cabaret’ (here, for those who need a reminder) , and I again noticed the how the first line of the ‘verse’ (for want of a better word) only rhymes with the first lines of the other verses - and they can be up to 30-40 seconds apart, so they are not obvious rhymes, but you notice them in the background.

The rhymes are ‘room’, ‘broom’, ‘doom’ and ‘tomb’ - and they are not co-incidental, since the lyrics change the well-known phrase ‘from cradle to grave’ to ‘from cradle to tomb’, to ensure the rhyme is made.

Is there a name for this and are there any other examples of it?

As an aside…

:grin:

If it’s the right lyrics I’m looking at, you also have “sitting” rhyming with “knitting.” It’s just a basic type of poetic form. I don’t know of any special name for it. I just see an ABCBC rhyme scheme in those particular sections.

“What good is sitting/along in your room,” etc "with “Put down the knitting/the book and the broom” and “what goods permitting/some prophet of doom”. “Chum” is a slant rhyme with “broom.” There’s also an internal rhyme with “play” and “cabaret” before the final “caberet” in the verse.

In different parts of the songs, it spins off to different rhyme schemes, but all the “A” sections are rhymed ABCBC throughout (with an extra line at the end, for ABCBBC).