rhyme |
rhymery |
As nouns the difference between rhyme and rhymery
is that
rhyme is (obsolete) number while
rhymery is (derogatory) the art or habit of making rhymes.
As a verb rhyme
is (obsolete) to number; count; reckon.
rhyme |
monorhyme |
As nouns the difference between rhyme and monorhyme
is that
rhyme is number while
monorhyme is a poem whose lines all end with the same rhyme.
As a verb rhyme
is to number; count; reckon.
rhyme |
rhymical |
As a noun rhyme
is number.
As a verb rhyme
is to number; count; reckon.
As an adjective rhymical is
of or pertaining to rhyme.
rhyme |
nonrhyming |
As a noun rhyme
is (obsolete) number.
As a verb rhyme
is (obsolete) to number; count; reckon.
As an adjective nonrhyming is
that does not rhyme.
rhyme |
rhymelike |
As a noun rhyme
is (obsolete) number.
As a verb rhyme
is (obsolete) to number; count; reckon.
As an adjective rhymelike is
resembling or characteristic of rhyme.
rhyme |
seussian |
As a noun rhyme
is (obsolete) number.
As a verb rhyme
is (obsolete) to number; count; reckon.
As an adjective seussian is
of or pertaining to , "dr seuss" (1904–1991), american writer and cartoonist best known for his imaginative children's books, often written in rhyme.
rhyme |
fingerplay |
As nouns the difference between rhyme and fingerplay
is that
rhyme is (obsolete) number while
fingerplay is a rhyme for young children consisting of a set of hand movements coordinated with a song or chant.
As a verb rhyme
is (obsolete) to number; count; reckon.
rhyme |
holorhyme |
As nouns the difference between rhyme and holorhyme
is that
rhyme is number while
holorhyme is an extreme form of rhyme in which two lines are phonetically identical (as in "For I scream / for ice-cream").
As a verb rhyme
is to number; count; reckon.
rhyme |
rondelet |
As nouns the difference between rhyme and rondelet
is that
rhyme is number while
rondelet is a metric verse (form), modeled after the rondeau, in two rhymes over seven lines, the first (in four syllables) being repeated as third and refrain (final one), each other line having eight syllables.
As a verb rhyme
is to number; count; reckon.
rhyme |
rondel |
As nouns the difference between rhyme and rondel
is that
rhyme is (obsolete) number while
rondel is a metric form of verse using two rhymes, usually fourteen 8- to 10-syllable lines in three stanzas, with the first lines of the first stanza returning as refrain of the next two.
As a verb rhyme
is (obsolete) to number; count; reckon.
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