Yes, they both end in an "ooze" sound. Unless you mean loose, then, no.
Edit(Eliyda):
Depends. Rhyming can be by the way the words are pronounced, by spelling, or by both of those. The way they are pronounced, they do. Spelling, not at all. Depends on what you are going for. Hope this helped.
Yes, "choose" and "lose" rhyme because they both have the same ending sound "-ooze."
Yes.
No.
Loose. Booze. Groove?lose, cruise, choose
Her sheep. -_-
Their mittens.
The opposite of find is lose.The failure to find something would be to miss or overlook.Careful! Many people misspell "lose" as "loose", which is a completely different word that means "not tight". The confusion is understandable given English spelling, where the words lose, choose, and snooze all rhyme, but lose and hose don't!
I believe you are referring to rhyme instead of rhythm. Blues, clues, snooze, twos, booze, whose, lose, glues, coos, choose, moos, and cues all rhyme with shoes. I hope this answers your question. If you were talking about rhythm, were you referencing literature rhythm or tap dancing rhythm?
The cast of Choose or Lose - 1999 includes: Gregory Monro as Jim
One word that rhymes with Tuesday is "choose day."
"You'll lose me."
The cast of Choose or Lose - 2008 includes: Audrey Cain Fall Out Boy
Choose or Lose - 2008 TV was released on: USA: 27 October 2008