They all rhyme, some are just harder than others. Orange rhymes with door hinge. Purple rhymes with chirple, or even any "ul" sound. Silver can rhyme with chilver or any "ur" sound.
cold, bold, old, told, mold,.....lolled, polled, rolled, ..poled, doled,..foaled, shoaledmould (not in US)Hold, Sold, ScoldFold, mold, etc. Usually anything w/ one syllable ending with -old will rhyme with goldRoald (as in Roald Dahl)week oldsoldOld, hold, sold, mold, cold, boldI can only think of cold.bold, fold, hold, mold, sold, told.old, mould, fold, cold, hold, sold and bold
NOTE: Please do NOT merge questions into this one that are not about the following words:Month, silver, orange, (door hinge does not rhyme with orange), and purple.Another opinion:I can prove this wrong:Month rhymes with hunth, an abbreviation for hundred thousand.Silver rhymes with chilver, a female lamb, and the given name Wilver.Orange rhymes with the Blorenge, a hill in Wales, and Gorringe, a family name, and for some people sporange, which is a plant, fungal, or algal structure producing and containing spores.Purple rhymes with curple (the hindquarters of a horse) and hirple (to walk with a limp).As you can see, all of those 4 words have rhymes.Another opinion:I think that "billionth" and "millionth" rhyme well with "month". And I do believe that "door hinge" does rhyme with "orange".Also, in rhymes, a good poet can be forgiven much, and can be given the benefit of the doubt. "sits well" with "purple". Or "demur" with "silver"."Orange" has always been pronounced OR-INJ for as long as I've lived. Some people pronounce it AR-INJ, but I've rarely heard anyone pronounce it that way. If you break the word down into syllables, it's OR and ANGE. I don't know why anyone would pronounce OR as ARE. That makes no sense phonetically.Thus, the words forage, storage, and porridge allrhyme with "orange". Perfect rhymes.Oxford failed to take into account that English words typically have more than one pronunciation, depending on the dialect. Example: toe-may-toe "tomato" vs. toe-mah-toe, as in the famous song. Apparently the Oxford scholars have never been to Massachusetts.Oxford: FAIL.Nurple - an insult in Charlie and the Chocolate FactoryIt's not in the dictionary, but it has been used before!There are no words in the English dictionary that rhyme with orange or purple, however, there are made-up words that rhyme with them. There may also be foreign language words that they rhyme with which may be useful in the event of needing to use them in poems or songs.None have any words, syllables, phrases, mono-phrases, suffixes and or prefixes that rhyme with them! Go ahead, try it!nothing rhymes with orange
Pete Chilver was born in 1924.
Pete Chilver died in 2008.
Henry Chilver has written: 'The exploitation of science and technology'
Silver
E.M Chilver has written: 'Western grassfields, Cameroun Republic' -- subject(s): Languages
Quicksilver there is also the words chilver which means female lamb
The diminutive of an ewe can be referred to as a lamb. This is the young one of a sheep since an ewe is a female sheep.
A lamb. A female (ewe) is also called a Chilver - it's not used much and is very Olde Englishe! But it's the only word the rhymes with Silver and you can use it in Scrabble.
A lamb. A female (ewe) is also called a Chilver - it's not used much and is very Olde Englishe! But it's the only word the rhymes with Silver and you can use it in Scrabble.
They all rhyme, some are just harder than others. Orange rhymes with door hinge. Purple rhymes with chirple, or even any "ul" sound. Silver can rhyme with chilver or any "ur" sound.
cold, bold, old, told, mold,.....lolled, polled, rolled, ..poled, doled,..foaled, shoaledmould (not in US)Hold, Sold, ScoldFold, mold, etc. Usually anything w/ one syllable ending with -old will rhyme with goldRoald (as in Roald Dahl)week oldsoldOld, hold, sold, mold, cold, boldI can only think of cold.bold, fold, hold, mold, sold, told.old, mould, fold, cold, hold, sold and bold
NOTE: Please do NOT merge questions into this one that are not about the following words:Month, silver, orange, (door hinge does not rhyme with orange), and purple.Another opinion:I can prove this wrong:Month rhymes with hunth, an abbreviation for hundred thousand.Silver rhymes with chilver, a female lamb, and the given name Wilver.Orange rhymes with the Blorenge, a hill in Wales, and Gorringe, a family name, and for some people sporange, which is a plant, fungal, or algal structure producing and containing spores.Purple rhymes with curple (the hindquarters of a horse) and hirple (to walk with a limp).As you can see, all of those 4 words have rhymes.Another opinion:I think that "billionth" and "millionth" rhyme well with "month". And I do believe that "door hinge" does rhyme with "orange".Also, in rhymes, a good poet can be forgiven much, and can be given the benefit of the doubt. "sits well" with "purple". Or "demur" with "silver"."Orange" has always been pronounced OR-INJ for as long as I've lived. Some people pronounce it AR-INJ, but I've rarely heard anyone pronounce it that way. If you break the word down into syllables, it's OR and ANGE. I don't know why anyone would pronounce OR as ARE. That makes no sense phonetically.Thus, the words forage, storage, and porridge allrhyme with "orange". Perfect rhymes.Oxford failed to take into account that English words typically have more than one pronunciation, depending on the dialect. Example: toe-may-toe "tomato" vs. toe-mah-toe, as in the famous song. Apparently the Oxford scholars have never been to Massachusetts.Oxford: FAIL.Nurple - an insult in Charlie and the Chocolate FactoryIt's not in the dictionary, but it has been used before!There are no words in the English dictionary that rhyme with orange or purple, however, there are made-up words that rhyme with them. There may also be foreign language words that they rhyme with which may be useful in the event of needing to use them in poems or songs.None have any words, syllables, phrases, mono-phrases, suffixes and or prefixes that rhyme with them! Go ahead, try it!nothing rhymes with orange