Rhymed Meaning in English
word · lemma: rhyme
ˈɹaɪmd
RYMD
ɹˈaɪmd
RYMD
Definition
To have ended with the same sound as another word (in poetry or song), or to have made words that have the same ending sound.
Usage & Nuances
Usually used in poetry, songs, and children's rhymes. Only applies to words or lines that end with the same or very similar sounds. Not all similar endings 'rhyme' in English—pronunciation matters. 'Rhymed' is the past form of 'rhyme' (verb), as in 'The poem rhymed'.
Spanish: rimar - tener rima (poema)Portuguese (BR): rimar - fazer rimaPortuguese (PT): rimar - fazer rimaChinese (Simplified): 押韵Chinese (Traditional): 押韻Hindi: तुकबंदी करनाArabic: قَافِيَة (فعل) - تَوافَقَ في القافيةBengali: ছন্দ মিলেছিলRussian: рифмовались - рифмовалJapanese: 韻を踏んだVietnamese: vần với nhauKorean: 운을 맞췄다Turkish: uyaklıydıUrdu: ہم قافیہ ہوئےIndonesian: vần với nhau
Example Sentences
The last two lines of the poem rhymed.
basic
The students rhymed 'cat' with 'hat'.
basic
She rhymed every sentence in her song.
basic
His jokes always rhymed, which made everyone smile.
natural
I didn't notice that 'love' and 'glove' rhymed until you pointed it out.
natural
Even though the lines rhymed, the poem still sounded strange.
natural