In American English, it is pronounced "plack" -- to rhyme with "black." In proper English - as in the English adopted and pioneered by the british and closely followed by australians it is pronouced "plarck" - to rhyme with the word "dark"
Month is one of the word that dose not rhyme just like purple and orange.
Quicksilver there is also the words chilver which means female lamb
Three of them are colors: silver, purple, and orange.The fourth word is month.There are plenty of other English words that don't rhyme (i.e., angst, scalp, twelfth, depth, width) but these four are by far the most common non-rhyming English words.
"Yea" means "yes" in a number of contexts in Modern English. Often it is paired with the word "nay" meaning "no", so people may say "vote yea or nay" The spelling "yea" indicates that the word is pronounced to rhyme with the word "play". If it is pronounced to rhyme with "blah" it is usually spelled "yeah" as in the Beatles' song "She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah". The meaning is the same.
As alrighty is not an English word, one can not rhyme with it.
No!
Not necessarily. Different languages have different phonetic systems and rules for rhyming, so words that rhyme in one language may not rhyme in another. Additionally, languages may have different sounds that are associated with rhyming.
It means- Rhyme
NOPE
You just spelled rhyme. There are 2 vowels: "y" and "e".
i dont think theres a word for it.
In American English, it is pronounced "plack" -- to rhyme with "black." In proper English - as in the English adopted and pioneered by the british and closely followed by australians it is pronouced "plarck" - to rhyme with the word "dark"
The word sixpence does not rhyme with any other words. Sing a Song of Sixpence is an English nursery rhyme.
Yes, but "jable" isn't a real English word.
The only word in the English language that is a perfect rhyme is ghettos.
"Fanish" is not an English word. If it is a name, "vanish" would rhyme with it.