rhymed

IPA: rˈaɪmd

adjective

  • having corrnesponding sounds especially terminal sounds
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Examples of "rhymed" in Sentences

  • He was fond of saying that his name rhymed with “weighty,” not “Wheaties.”
  • A few days after Chantal had been christened, Roald realized her name rhymed with Dahl and renamed her Tessa.
  • A few year ago, I finally heard it pronounced and thought to myself that it was funny that his name rhymed with Dracula.
  • I fear I'm repeating them when I say that this comedy in rhymed verse does an all-too effective job in creating a boor who outstays his welcome.
  • _Moor_, and _More_: and when he says that his good nature towards the dunces was so great that he had even "rhymed for Moor" (Ib.v. 373.), I cannot but suspect that the Moor _for_ whom he had _rhymed_, was the
  • Reinhardt describes himself as someone whose goal is to “break the bonds twixt world and dream,” and “Afterlife” obliges him by turning his own story into an “Everyman” drama, a consideration of the transience of life and the inevitably of death, often delivered in rhymed couplets.

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synonyms for rhymed
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