Yes, "sporange" rhymes with "orange." If you are going to use it in a poem, however, you should probably let people know what your definition of sporange is, since most people won't know.
Door hinge rhymes with orange if you pronounce like "or" instead of "ar". Ebonics revenge, avenge and scavenge
no but it rhymes with stout............if that helps ;]
This is the type of end rhyme referred to as "true rhyme."
They do not rhyme. They don't rhyme because they don't sound alike, and the fact that they don't have the same last two letters.
A few verbs that rhyme with 'scream' include scheme and dream.
Sporange is the only word that rhymes with the word orange.
this is the best i got orange porridge : )
Orange has almost no perfect rhymes.However, there are two proper names in the English language that rhyme with orange. They are Blorenge and Gorringe. The former is the name of a hill in the UK and the latter is a surname in Britain. Both are accepted as English proper nouns.Sporange rhymes with orange.It is a very rarely-used version of the word "sporangium", which is the botanical term for a part of a fern or a similar plant. Sporangium/sporange also means the part of a plant (or fungus) that contains the spores.Orange rhymes with Blorenge (a mountain in Wales).
If you are writing a poem, best to use the word Apple instead. I'm told that Shakespears "Much Ado About Nothing" was inteneded to be called "Much Ado About Oranges," but on discovering nothing rymed with orange, he chose Nothing.
you can not rhyme rhinoceros with anything and i think orange.
No
No.
No.
There is no true rhyme for orange in the English language same with silver. but one can use a slant rhyme such as porridge, or forrage. Silver and sliver
Yes
Orange
They are near rhymes, so depending on the context and format of your work, they can be used as a rhyme.