Smartass Lass, sassy lassie
carte, kart, tarte are French words rhyming with the English word smart.
A rhyming word pair for "clever feline" would be "smart cat." Rhyming words have the same ending sounds, and in this case, "clever" and "feline" rhyme with "smart" and "cat" respectively. This pair maintains the original meaning of the words while adding a poetic and rhythmic element to the description.
yes delivery and eternally are rhyming words :p thnks 4 asking
Create Procreate Recreate
tame
The correct spelling of the slang term is two words "smart aleck" (joker, wise guy).
"Pet theft" could be a pair of rhyming words meaning a little heist.
ARTIST
carte, kart, tarte are French words rhyming with the English word smart.
Have the same meaning or not, it is a rhyming word.
tall brawl
Lucky guess.
The rhyming words for "he" are "she," "we," and "free." The rhyming words for "woe" are "toe," "go," and "so."
Yes. All languages have rhyming words, but not all cultures value rhyming as a literary form.
See the Online Etymology Dictionary entry at http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=smart, which says: smart (adj.) late O.E. smeart "sharp, severe, stinging," related to smeortan (see smart (v.)). Meaning "quick, active, clever" is attested from c.1303, probably from the notion of "cutting" wit, words, etc. Meaning "trim in attire" first attested 1718, "ascending from the kitchen to the drawing-room c.1880." [Weekley] In ref. to devices, "behaving as though guided by intelligence" (e.g. smart bomb) first attested 1972. Smarts "good sense, intelligence," is first recorded 1968. Smart aleck is from 1865, perhaps in allusion to Aleck Hoag, notorious pimp, thief, and confidence man in New York City in early 1840s. Smart cookie is from 1948; smarty-pants first attested 1941.
A rhyming word pair for "clever feline" would be "smart cat." Rhyming words have the same ending sounds, and in this case, "clever" and "feline" rhyme with "smart" and "cat" respectively. This pair maintains the original meaning of the words while adding a poetic and rhythmic element to the description.
No, "beautiful" and "wonderful" are not rhyming words. Rhyming words have similar ending sounds, but these two words do not sound the same at the end.