rhyme with (someone or something)
rhyme with (someone or something)
1. To have the same or similar sound as another word. Almost nothing in the English language rhymes with "orange." Despite its odd spelling, "pique" rhymes with "peak."
2. To think of, speak, or write a word that has the same or similar sound as another word. I thought it was rather clever rhyming "worth" with "dearth." It's a little lazy just rhyming "town" with "town" instead of using a different word.
See also: rhyme
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
rhyme something with something
[for someone] to make one word rhyme with another word. I need to rhyme tree with some other word. Any suggestions? Can I rhyme good with food?
See also: rhyme
rhyme with something
[for a word] to rhyme with another word. You can't use house in that line of the poem, because it doesn't rhyme with mice. The last word in your poem doesn't rhyme with any other word in the poem!
See also: rhyme
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
- rhyme with
- regs
- jingler
- Sexton Blake
- donkey's ears
- run one’s rhymes
- run rhymes
- ginger beer
- Brahms and Liszt
- half-inch