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deliriously demency drinkability drudgery dubiously dysteleology exultancy facility factually fallaciously falsity fancifully fastidiously fatefully fearlessly fearsomely fictitiously fidgety fiduciary genially geolatry geophony healthily helpfully heterogeneously heterography heuristically hippopotami industrially indu...
So you're writing a song or a poem and are frustrated from searching for the right rhyme? Then you're in the right place! I want to find a rhyme for the word words that rhymes with typhusRank 1 rhymes office surface fuss memphis rufusRank 2 rhymes ...
I want to find a rhyme for the word words that rhymes with hospice Rank 1 rhymes purposecampuscompasspompousolympus corpus Rank 2 rhymes usbusinessjesusofficepromise seriouschristmasdangerousservicebus nervousfamousridiculouswitnesshappiness jealousdiscussplusthomasgoodness ...
I remember a cow jumping over the moon in a certain nursery rhyme! With how sad steps, O moon, thou climb’st the skies; How silently, and with how wan a face. What, may it be that even in heavenly place That busy archer his sharp arrows tries? Sure, if that long-with-love-acqu...
The “Ten Little Indians” rhyme guides the mystery and horror of the novel. The poem, childish verses tell the story of the deaths of ten Indian boys and end with the line that gives the novel its title: “and then there were none.” A framed copy of the rhyme hangs in every bedroo...
Every day, I die… just a little, letting go of pieces of me which no longer serve a purpose. I must die daily if I am to make room for more. I suppose the “finale” is somewhat the same. This life, this plane of existence, concludes with a shedding of that which is no longer...
The rhyme references “rosy” which most likely means rosary beads, as well as “posies”, a type of flower which was used to stop the scent of death and decay. The final line of this well known rhyme is “We all fall down”. This implies the bleak and dismal outcome of the plague...
foolish &c 499; sophistical &c 477; unmeaning &c 517; without rhyme or reason; fantastic. Int. fiddlededee!, pish!, pho!^, in the name of the Prophet–figs! [Horace Smith]. Phr. credat Judaeus Apella [Lat.] [Horace]; tell it to the marines. ...
Carefully measured stanzas with a fascinating rhyme scheme embedded throughout, together with the unique and completely individualistic style of its author, are but a few of the elements that combine to elevate this poem in the public eye. It reaches an as-yet-unparalleled plane of poetic ...