different between rhyme vs rhymical

rhyme

See Wiktionary:Rhymes for a list of Rhymes pages in Wiktionary

English

Alternative forms

  • rime
  • rhime (obsolete)

Etymology

  • The noun derives from Middle English ryme, rime (number, rhyme, verse), from a merger of Old English r?m (number) and Old French rime, ryme (rhyme). Old French rime is of uncertain origin: it may represent Latin rhythmus (rhythm), from Ancient Greek ?????? (rhuthmós, measure, rhythm); or Frankish *r?m (number, series, count), from Proto-Germanic *r?m? (calculation, number), from Proto-Indo-European *h?rey- (to regulate, count), cognate with Old English r?m above; or a conflation of the two. Cognates of Old English r?m include Old Frisian r?m (number, amount, tale), Old High German r?m (series, row, number), Old Norse rím (calculation, calendar), Old Irish r?m (number), Welsh rhif (number), Ancient Greek ??????? (arithmós, number). Middle Low German r?m (rhyme), Dutch rijm (rhyme), German Reim (rhyme), Norwegian rim (rhyme), Swedish rim (rhyme), Icelandic rím (rhyme) are from Old French.
  • The verb derives from Middle English rymen, rimen, from Old English r?man (to count, enumerate, number), from Proto-Germanic *r?man?.
  • The spelling has been influenced by an assumed relationship with rhythm. Whether this relationship exists is uncertain (as stated above).

Pronunciation

  • (UK, US) enPR: r?m, IPA(key): /?a?m/
  • Rhymes: -a?m
  • Homophone: rime

Noun

rhyme (countable and uncountable, plural rhymes)

  1. (countable, uncountable) Rhyming verse (poetic form)
    Many editors say they don't want stories written in rhyme.
  2. A thought expressed in verse; a verse; a poem; a tale told in verse.
    Tennyson’s rhymes
  3. (countable) A word that rhymes with another.
    Norse poetry is littered with rhymes like "sól ... sunnan".
    Rap makes use of rhymes such as "money ... honey" and "nope ... dope".
    1. (countable, in particular) A word that rhymes with another, in that it is pronounced identically with the other word from the vowel in its stressed syllable to the end.
      "Awake" is a rhyme for "lake".
  4. (uncountable) Rhyming: sameness of sound of part of some words.
    The poem exhibits a peculiar form of rhyme.
  5. (linguistics) rime
  6. (obsolete) Number.

Hyponyms

  • stave-rhyme, end rhyme
  • internal rhyme, cross rhyme
  • half rhyme, near rhyme:
    • pararhyme, slant rhyme
  • full rhyme, perfect rhyme, exact rhyme, true rhyme

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

rhyme (third-person singular simple present rhymes, present participle rhyming, simple past and past participle rhymed)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) To compose or treat in verse; versify.
    • 1742, Alexander Pope, The Dunciad, book 4, lines 101-102:
      There marched the bard and blockhead, side by side,
      Who rhymed for hire, and patronized for pride.
  2. (intransitive, followed by with) Of a word, to be pronounced identically with another from the vowel in its stressed syllable to the end.
    "Creation" rhymes with "integration" and "station".
  3. (reciprocal) Of two or more words, to be pronounced identically from the vowel in the stressed syllable of each to the end of each.
    "Mug" and "rug" rhyme.
    "India" and "windier" rhyme with each other in non-rhotic accents.
    I rewrote the story to make it rhyme.
  4. (transitive, obsolete) To number; count; reckon.

Derived terms

Translations

References

  • Douglas Harper (2001–2021) , “rhyme”, in Online Etymology Dictionary

Anagrams

  • Hymer, Myhre

Yola

Noun

rhyme

  1. Alternative form of reem

rhyme From the web:

  • what rhymes with
  • what rhymes with orange
  • what rhymes with me
  • what rhymes with you
  • what rhymes with time
  • what rhymes with love
  • what rhymes with purple
  • what rhymes with life


rhymical

English

Etymology

rhyme +? -ical

Adjective

rhymical (not comparable)

  1. Of or pertaining to rhyme.
    • 1913, James Whitcomb Riley, Edmund Henry Eitel, The complete works of James Whitcomb Riley
      And in that indulgent epoch it was no uncommon thing to find rhymical twins made of "chime" and "shine", while "roof" and "cough" and "enough" strayed hand in hand through many a flowery page of the old pastorals, and no critic was ever intrepid enough to dare protest against the strange mésalliance.
    • 1978, Veronica Forrest-Thomson, Poetic artifice: a theory of twentieth-century poetry (page 3)
      We must look, then, for its place in the formal pattern, the metrical scheme, the rhymical pattern, and the syntactic pattern.

See also

  • rhythmical

rhymical From the web:

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