Stuiper is not an English word...did you mean "stupider"?
I'm afraid "stuiper" and "thame" do not have any perfect rhymes. You could try to use near rhymes or slant rhymes to create a more artistic connection between the two words.
No.
if you want it to
It is not clear from your question what particular word you want to rhyme with. Do you want words that rhyme with "word" or perhaps "world" or what?
The simple answer is no! However, they both contain that "r" sound. The rhyme is very weak, but it might work, depending on how strong you want the rhyme to be.
There are three major pronunciations of want, two of them short sounds.-- short O (to rhyme with font)-- caret O (to rhyme with haunt)*-- short U (to rhyme with bunt)*primarily British English (wawnt-ed)
Yes, a quatrain is a four-line stanza in poetry that can rhyme. The rhyme scheme of a quatrain can vary, such as AABB, ABAB, or ABBA.
Yes, "fuzzy" and "wuzzy" rhyme with each other. Although of course, "wuzzy" isn't a word that is in the dictionary, so if you are using it out of the context of the "Fuzzy Wuzzy was a bear" rhyme, you might want to rethink.
You can design your space ship how ever you want to fly it. Do whatever you want!
By definition, for something to rhyme, the end sound of a word needs to be similar or identical to the word you want it to rhyme with. So, theoretically, anything that ends with "ness" can rhyme with anxiousness because the end sound in anxiousness is "ness".
There are three major pronunciations of want, two of them short sounds.-- short O (to rhyme with font)-- caret O (to rhyme with haunt)*-- short U (to rhyme with bunt)*primarily British English (wawnt-ed)
"replica" and "America" are pretty close, but they don't quite rhyme with each other perfectly, because they have a different number of syllables, and some of the sounds are different. If you are only looking for an end rhyme, this could work. To get the cadence right you might need to add a small word in front of replica (like "a" or "the"). If you want a perfect rhyme though, these don't rhyme perfectly.
simple: go to the website "Rhyme Zone. com" (type it on Google) then select the instructions and search filters on the website (it should be easy) type in what you want to rhyme, and it will come up with a comprehensive list of all syllables and words that rhyme.