Final answer:
The term for a poem or verse having a regular correspondence of sounds at the end of lines is known as 'rhyme', which makes language memorable and pleasurable.
Step-by-step explanation:
The literary term that describes poem or verse having a regular correspondence of sounds of the last words or last syllables in each line is known as rhyme. For example, in formal poetry, there's a use of end rhyme which is the most common form, such as a couplet, where a pair of end-rhyming verse lines often have the same length. In contrast, assonance refers to the repetition of vowel sounds within words and is not necessarily at the end of lines. Similarly, consonance is the repetition of consonant sounds either at the end or within words, but again does not refer to rhyming at the end of lines. Lastly, alliteration is characterized by the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words which also differs from rhyme. An example of rhyme in action comes from William Wordsworth's poem The Daffodils, featuring a rhyme scheme diagrammed as ABABCC.