No, wind does not rhyme with grin. Wind rhymes with kind, while grin rhymes with win.
No.
Some words that rhyme with Winston include pin, tin, spin, and grin.
no
Nope, not at all. "wind" - ind "thing" - ing
No, wind does not rhyme with ends. "Wind" is pronounced with a short "i" sound, while "ends" is pronounced with a short "e" sound.
No. Wind can be pronounced in two ways but both have the d sound at the end. But this is a SLANT rhyme, if allowed in whatever project you are doing.
aabccd, ddeffe, dddd
No, "grins" is not the plural of "grin." "Grins" is the present tense form of the verb "grin." The plural of "grin" is "grins."
Will grin.
No. Unless you say it with a Jay-Z type voice.
Smirk, grin.
Depends on whether wind is used as a verb or a noun. As a verb "to wind", they would rhyme. As a noun, "wind" is the one word ending in "-ind" that doesn't rhyme with the rest of the group (blind, mind, kind, find, hind, grind etc.) However, in Shakespearean times they do, examples are such as in The Tempest, "Arise ye subterranean winds, More to distract their guilty minds!" and so forth, suggesting that back in the days English language is a bit more consistent.
Grin has written: 'The seeker of adventure'