Aya vs Rime - What's the difference?
aya | rime |
(archaic, dialect, New England) yes; yea; aye.
* 1938 , Thornton Wilder, Our Town: A Play in Three Acts , Coward-McCann and Samuel French (1965), ISBN 0743223136:
*:“The date is May 7, 1901, just before dawn. (COCK CROW offstage.) Aya, just about.”
* 2001 , David McCullough, John Adams , Simon & Schuster (2001), ISBN 0573613494:
*:“And for all her reading, her remarkable knowledge of English poetry and literature, she was never to lose certain countrified Yankee patterns of speech, saying 'Canady' for Canada, as an example, using 'set' for sit, or the old New England 'aya,' for yes.”
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(meteorology, uncountable) ice formed by the rapid freezing of cold water droplets of fog onto a cold surface.
* De Quincey
(meteorology, uncountable) a coating or sheet of ice so formed.
(uncountable) a film or slimy coating.
To freeze or congeal into hoarfrost.
(obsolete, or, dialectal) Number.
rhyme
(linguistics) the second part of a syllable, from the vowel on, as opposed to the onset
As an adverb aya
is there, over there.As a noun rime is
.aya
English
Adverb
(-)rime
English
(wikipedia rime)Etymology 1
From (etyl) rim, from Old English .Noun
(-)- The trees were now covered with rime .
Synonyms
* (a deposition of ice) hoarfrost, frostDerived terms
* rimyVerb
(rim)Etymology 2
(etyl) rime, from (etyl) . Influenced in meaning by (etyl) rime from the same Germanic source.Alternative forms
* rhymeNoun
(en noun)- (Coleridge)
- (Landor)
Usage notes
In reading education, "rime" refers to the vowel and the letters that come after the vowels in a syllable. For example, sit, spit, and split all have the same rime (-it). Words that rhyme often share the same rime, such as rock and sock (-ock). However, words that rhyme do not always share the same rime, such as claim and fame (-aim and -ame). Additionally, words that share the same rime do not always rhyme, such as tough and though (-ough). Rhyme and rime are not interchangeable, although they often overlap.Verb
(rim)Etymology 3
Uncertain.Etymology 4
(etyl) (lena) rima.External links
*SIL Glossary of Linguistic Terms
