Maybe: open-ended-ly, menderly, other genderly...
You'll just have to be creative. Or, you could change your wording so you can use tender, then you increase your choices. So tender could lead to sender, mender, bender, defender, etc.
"Move" and "love" form an eye rhyme in "A Girl in Love."
It seems pretty ovbious, But No those words do not Rhyme. Snakegirl2001 Sort of,because when you are gentle you are sometimes quiet.
Words that look like they should rhyme, but don't. love and move
You don't have to rhyme the entire word. It's the latter half of it, or the last syllable that is the most important to rhyme. Some words that rhyme with judgmental are: rental parental mental gentle centennial lintel
Never seek to tell thy love / Love that never told can be / For the gentle wind does move / Silently invisibly.by William Blake
It was a "smooth" reationship It was going "smooth"
love and shove (as far as i know)
Words like "love" and "prove" or "time" and "line" are examples of slant rhyme. They have similar ending sounds but are not perfect rhymes.
No, tough does not rhyme with love. Rhymes involve matching sounds at the end of words, and tough and love have different ending sounds.
An imperfect rhyme is when two words look like they rhyme but don't. For example cough and tough.
No. The word "in" does not rhyme with out.Examples of words that rhyme with out:AboutBoutCloutDoubtFloutGoutGroutLoutPoutRoutShoutSnoutStoutToutTroutExamples of words that rhyme with in:BinDinFinGinHenMenSinTenTinWhenWenWinYenYinZen
The two main kinds of rhyme are perfect rhyme, where the sounds of the words match exactly (e.g. cat, hat), and slant rhyme, where the sounds are similar but not identical (e.g. prove, love).