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rhyme

noun
In poetry, the correspondence of sounds in the terminating words or syllables of two verses, one of which succeeds the other immediately, or at no great distance. For rhyme with reason may dispense, and sound has right to govern sense. To constitute this correspondence in single words or in syllables, it is necessary that the vowel, and the final articulations or consonants, should be the same, or have nearly the same sound. The initial consonants may be different, as in find and mind, new and drew, cause and laws.

rhyme

A harmonical succession of sounds. The youth with songs and rhymes, some dance, and some haul the rope.

rhyme

Poetry; a poem. He knew himself to sing, and build the lofty rhyme.

rhyme

Aword of sound to answer to another word. Rhyme or reason, number or sense. But from that time unto this season, I had neither rhyme nor reason.

rhyme

verb intransitive
To accord in sound. But fagoted his notions as they fell, and if they rhym’d and rattl’d, all was well.

rhyme

To make verses. There march’d the bard and blockhead side by side, who rhym’d for hire, and patroniz’d for pride.

rhyme

verb transitive
To put into rhyme.