What are words that rhyme with week?

What are words that rhyme with week?

Word Rhyme rating
seek 100
weak 100
peak 100
creek 100

What is the rhyme word for day?

Word Rhyme rating
May 100
pay 100
stay 100
lay 100

What rhymes with months for a poem?

Just about every elementary schooler learns the months of the year with an easy rhyme: “Thirty days has [or hath] September, April, June, and November. All the rest have 31, except February …” The leap year, which comes once in four / Gives February one day more.”

What rhymes with day for a poem?

‘day’ may also rhyme with:

  • hay · everyday · everyway.
  • freeway · leeway · preway · seaway.
  • gallway · hallway.
  • say · way · away · monday · someday · today.
  • bay · bey · brae · bray · cay · clay · dray · fay · fe · fey…

What are some words that rhyme with creek?

Word Rhyme rating Categories
peak 100 Noun, Adjective
cheek 100 Noun
leak 100 Noun, Verb
bleak 100 Adjective

What rhymes with Monday?

Word Rhyme rating Meter
Sunday 100 [/x]
Bundy 100 [/x]
Grundy 100 [/x]
Mundi 100 [/x]

What rhymes 9th?

Words that rhyme with ninth

lithe blithe
scythe tithe
writhe ith
sithe heighth
withe dryth

Does month have a rhyme?

How Many Days in a Month Rhyme: Thirty days hath September, April, June, and November; All the rest have thirty-one, Excepting February alone, And that has twenty-eight days clear, and twenty-nine in each leap year.

What rhymes with week ✁?

Words that rhyme with week include cheek, seek, meek, sleek, creek, geek, peek, reek, gleek and leek. Find more rhyming words at wordhippo.com!

What are the different types of rhyme?

1 Perfect rhyme. This one is probably the most common rhyme type that you’ve encountered till now. 2 Family rhyme. So far we’ve explored perfect rhymes, in which both the vowel sound of the accented word and the following consonants match identically. 3 Additive/Subtractive rhyme. 4 Assonance rhyme. 5 Consonance rhyme.

How do you add an additive rhyme to a sentence?

To create an additive rhyme we could add an s to the end and find words that rhyme with “feels” (like “steals” or “wheels”). Or we could take it further and add additional non-stressed syllables to the end of the original word and thus look for words that rhyme with “feeling” (like “bleeding” or “healing”).

Why are different types of rhymes used to convey different emotions?

Each one of them lands differently when sung. Consider this: the stronger the rhyming connection between two words, the more stable and resolved the rhyme will feel. The weaker the rhyming connection, the more unstable and unresolved it will feel. So you can use different types of rhymes to convey different emotions.