grant
save two?
Savor it, waver it, gave her it, flavor it,chocolate, silhouetteThere are no perfect rhymes
save up
gave like their life they freely gave
A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example sentences for the noun 'dread' are:Her dread of final exams gave her some sleepless nights. (subject of the sentence)A man whose dread caused him to shake had to be coaxed onto the firetruck's ladder. (subject of the relative clause)I saw the dread on the child's face as the dog approached. (direct object of the verb 'saw')We faced father's wrath with dread. (object of the preposition 'with')The word 'dread' is also a verb: dread, dreads, dreading, dreaded.
"Nursery rhymes" are not called "Mother Goose." Mother Goose is a mythical figure often associated with nursery rhymes and children's folk tales. The term "Mother Goose" was popularized by the publication of a collection of English nursery rhymes in 1780.
He Gave Me Nothing to Lose was created in 1979.
He gave rhymes and poems.
Geelong rhymes with many words like... belong so long (as in "good bye/see you soon") song thong pong tong (as in kitchen "tongs") ping pong wrong if you want..."king kong" haha... ding dong strong etc etc... hoped this gave you some help to your question...
Your father gave me twenty cows
No prefect rhymes, but for near rhymes try words ending with AVE. Dave, brave, save, cave, wave, pave, shave, behave, slave, crave, gave, fave, grave, aftershave, and engrave.
Raver or razor rhymes with saver. Braver, favor, gave her, paver, savor, slaver, waver.