Orange rhymes with itself and only itself. There are no other words, at least in the English dictionary, that rhyme with orange.
It isn't normally accepted that a rhyme counts if the two words are the same; however there are two proper nouns in the English language that rhyme with orange. They are Blorenge and Gorringe. The former is the name of a hill in the UK and the latter is a surname in Britain. Both are accepted as English proper nouns.
Not exactly. To rhyme exactly they would have to be "door-hinge" and "or-hinge". But they are as close as you're going to get for a rhyme for orange. If you were rapping about an orange door hinge in a song nobody would hear the difference. So they kinda ,sorta rhyme.
Nope. Unless you pronounce orange like orenge. And they also don't rhyme because the first E in henge makes a different sound than the A in orange.
No.
No, because the N sound isn't in porridge.
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Well, orange and door hinge rhyme, just because door hinge and orange both have "nge" at the end of them. So even though they don't sound alike, they rhyme in some terms. Though people still fight about it, in my opinion they rhyme. You may find somewhere else that they don't rhyme, but they really do.
Not very well.
you can not rhyme rhinoceros with anything and i think orange.
No.
No
No.
There is no true rhyme for orange in the English language same with silver. but one can use a slant rhyme such as porridge, or forrage. Silver and sliver
Orange
No, orange and doorhinge do not rhyme because they have different vowel sounds at the end.
No, because the N sound isn't in porridge.
Orange, purple, and silver do not have any words that rhyme with them in the dictionary.
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Orange is a color name that does not rhyme with anything.
Words rhyme when they have the same ending sound, but in the case of "orange," it doesn't have many words in the English language that end in the same sound to create a rhyme. It is one of those words that is considered to have no perfect rhyme in English.