In England, yes. In America, no.
The vowel sounds will be almost exactly the same, if you speak English with a standard US accent. They don't make a satisfying rhyme because of the double consonant ending send. In Great Britain, Canada and other places, been will rhyme more closely with seen or queen. Some US speakers will rhyme it a little more closely to bin.
BaleenBeanBeenBenzeneBetweenBuckbeanCaffeineCanteenCarbineCareenChlorineChristineCleanCodeineConveneCuisineCystineDauphinDeanDemeanDentineDreenDry-cleanEighteenFifteenFluoreneForeseenFourteenGalleinGangreneGeneGleanGreenHolsteinHousecleanHygeneJeanKeenLatrineLeanLystineMachineMarineMeanMienMorphineMurineNankeenNineteenObscenePeenPhosphenePralinePreenPre-teenPristineProlineProteinQueenRavineRoutineSalineSardeenSateenSceneScreenSeenSereneSeventeenSheenSilkscreenSistineSixteenSoybeanSparteineSpleenStrychnineStryneSubteenSunscreenTangerineTaurineTeenTerpeneThirteenTontineTrampolineTureenTweenUmpteenUncleanUnseenVaccineWeanWidescreenWindscreenXylenewords that rhyme with teen:beanseenkeenleanetc.Mean, queen, lean, bean, seen, and scene all rhyme with teen.
clean, been, seen, keen, mean (3 kinds), lean, teen, fen, sardine, Hardin, Cardin
Lets Be Seen Class Of 2013
Only the "ee" and "ea" rhyme, so they aren't a complete rhyme.
No, farted and fart do not rhyme because they do not end in a similar syllable. It is often seen as cheating to rhyme a word with itself.
One rhyme I thought of was Hall was seen out with Ghandi. Hall Deen is with Handy. The Dean is with Mandy.
Yes, the rhyme "Oranges and Lemons" has been around for many years. It is a traditional English nursery rhyme that dates back to at least the 18th century. The rhyme is often associated with a children's game played in London.
Mean, machine, bean, dean, green, Gene, Jean, gene, keen, lean, preen, seen, teen, wean.Many words rhyme with 'clean' such as: mean, bean, seen, green, lean, keen and a lot morelean, mean, ween, seen, bean, dean, jean, keen, queen, teen, etc.Mean, machine, bean, dean, green, Gene, Jean, gene, keen, lean, preen, seen, teen, wean.Many words rhyme with clean, and here are a few: mean, seen, scene, ween, teen, bean, green, dean, gene, Jean, sheen, preen, queen, lean, keen. Also, in England, the word "been" is pronounced with an "ee" sound, so it would rhyme; in America, it's pronounced with a short "i" sound, like "bin", so it would not rhyme.
Normally, an ode (which refers to a poetic tribute to a person or thing) is written in rhyme, for example the famous "Ode on a Grecian Urn" by John Keats. But you may have seen odes that have been translated from one language into another. Sometimes, a poem did rhyme in its original language, but when it is translated, it makes more sense if it is left unrhymed. This is true in some translations of Greek or Chinese odes-- making them rhyme might sound artificial or awkward in English, so the translator does not attempt to force them to rhyme.
To me it's always been a fabulous incomprehensibility, that more people don't rhyme the word "interdenominationalistically".
black bean jimmy dean relly mean in between