uyak, kafiye

listen to the pronunciation of uyak, kafiye
Turkish - English
{i} rhyme
A word that rhymes with another

Awake is a rhyme for lake.

The fact of rhyming

Many editors say they don't want stories written in rhyme.

Verse, poetry

nursery rhyme.

Of two or more words, to be pronounced identically from the vowel in the stressed syllable of each to the end of each

India and windier rhyme with each other in non-rhotic accents.

To put words together so that they rhyme

I rewrote it to make it rhyme.

The words or syllables so used must not begin with the same consonant, or if one begins with a vowel the other must begin with a consonant
When two or more words match in sound Example: "A sweet disorder in the dress/Kindles in clothes a wontonness" (Herrick pg 702)
Correspondence of sound in the terminating words or syllables of two or more verses, one succeeding another immediately or at no great distance
The repetition of concluding sounds in different words
A rhyme is a short poem which has rhyming words at the ends of its lines. He was teaching Helen a little rhyme. see also nursery rhyme = verse
An expression of thought in numbers, measure, or verse; a composition in verse; a rhymed tale; poetry; harmony of language
the repetition of the same ("perfect rhyme") or similar sounds, most often at the ends of lines
Verses, usually two, having this correspondence with each other; a couplet; a poem containing rhymes
To influence by rhyme
be similar in sound, especially with respect to the last syllable; "hat and cat rhyme"
If something happens or is done without rhyme or reason, there seems to be no logical reason for it to happen or be done. He picked people on a whim, without rhyme or reason. Type of echoing produced by the close placement of two or more words with similarly sounding final syllables. Rhyme is used in poetry (and occasionally in prose) to produce sounds that appeal to the ear and to unify and establish a poem's stanzaic form. End rhyme (i.e., rhyme used at the end of a line to echo the end of another line) is most common, but internal rhyme (occurring before the end of a line) is frequently used as an embellishment. Types of "true rhyme" include masculine rhyme, in which the two words end with the same vowel-consonant combination (stand/land); feminine rhyme (or double rhyme), in which two syllables rhyme (profession/discretion); and trisyllabic rhyme, in which three syllables rhyme (patinate/latinate)
a piece of poetry
If one word rhymes with another or if two words rhyme, they have a very similar sound. Words that rhyme with each other are often used in poems. June always rhymes with moon in old love songs. the sort of people who give their children names that rhyme: Donnie, Ronnie, Connie. a singer rhyming `eyes' with `realise'. rhymed couplets
To put into rhyme
Turkish - Turkish
redif
uyak, kafiye
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