Rhyming words own


143 best rhymes for 'own'

1 syllable

  • Don't
  • Lone
  • Phone
  • Known
  • Grown
  • Zone
  • Throne
  • Shown
  • Stone
  • Bone
  • Blown
  • Tone
  • Mon
  • Clone
  • Prone
  • Drone
  • Cone
  • Flown
  • Dome
  • Chrome

  • Home
  • Sewn
  • Hone
  • Roam
  • Joan
  • Trone
  • Scone
  • Goan
  • Rone
  • Thone
  • Crone
  • Slone
  • Foam
  • Comb
  • Gnome
  • Tome
  • Frome
  • Ohm
  • Loam
  • Yom

2 syllables

  • Alone
  • Unknown
  • Iphone
  • Condone
  • Capone
  • Cologne
  • Cyclone
  • Tombstone
  • Ozone
  • Homegrown
  • Cellphone
  • Backbone
  • Postpone
  • Dethrone
  • Disown
  • Leone
  • Atone
  • Gravestone
  • Malone
  • Stallone

  • Headstone
  • Brimstone
  • Trombone
  • Headphone
  • Outgrown
  • Tyrone
  • Flintstone
  • Milestone
  • Smartphone
  • Ramon
  • Rhinestone
  • Hormone
  • Keystone
  • Jawbone
  • Grindstone
  • Simone
  • Redstone
  • Timezone
  • Gemstone
  • Wishbone

  • Outshone
  • Limestone
  • Hipbone
  • Raton
  • Brownstone
  • Earphone
  • Hailstone
  • Wellstone
  • Moonstone
  • Sandstone
  • Greystone
  • Firestone
  • Dijon
  • Cheekbone
  • Bluestone
  • Bemoan
  • Syndrome
  • Jerome
  • Genome
  • Shalom

  • Stockholm

3 syllables

  • Microphone
  • Telephone
  • Overthrown
  • Silicone
  • Monotone
  • Overgrown
  • Methadone
  • Corleone
  • Xylophone
  • Overblown
  • Corazon
  • Saxophone
  • Megaphone
  • Collarbone
  • Provolone
  • Acetone
  • Chaperone
  • Yellowstone
  • Cornerstone
  • Homophone

  • Anemone
  • Cobblestone
  • Baritone
  • Undertone
  • Cortisone
  • Pheromone
  • Reggaeton
  • Unbeknown
  • Standalone
  • Speakerphone
  • Calderon
  • Anklebone
  • Styrofoam
  • Chromosome
  • Catacomb
  • Monochrome
  • Honeycomb
  • Superdome
  • Velodrome
  • Astrodome

4 syllables

  • Testosterone

5 syllables

  • Revolucion

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Words That Rhyme With "Own"

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1 syllable:

Beaune, blown, bone, bown, clone, Cohn, cone, crone, drone, flown, Goan, groan, grown, hone, Joan, known, Koen, loan, lone, moan, phone, pone, prone, Rhone, roan, rone, scone, sewn, shone, shown, Sloan, slone, sone, sown, stone, strown, thoen, throne, thrown, tone, trone, zone

2 syllables:

alone, atone, Bayonne, bemoan, blouson, Boulogne, Capone, cogon, cologne, condone, cyclone, depone, dethrone, disown, doblon, enthrone, flintstone, handsewn, hipbone, homegrown, impone, inthrone, intone, irone, ladrone, leone, Malone, ochone, outgrown, outshone, postpone, propone, quinone, ramon, Raton, Sharon, Simone, tenson, trombone, Tyrone, unblown, unknown, unmown, unsewn, unsown, unthrone

3 syllables:

bourguignon, disenthrone, doupion, overblown, overgrown, overthrown, romanone, sacaton, Sezession, standalone, unbeknown

4 syllables:

aldosterone, anthraquinone, benzophenone, Concepcion, hydroquinone, phylloquinone, radiophone

5 syllables:

acetophenone

7 syllables:

chloroacetophenone

Make up a dictionary of your own rhymes to any of the given words exact, rattle, night, squirrel, bird, book

Answer or solution2

Gregory

Rhyme is an important feature of poetic speech. Let's analyze this concept in more detail and give some examples of rhymes.

What is rhyme

The name "rhyme" goes back to the Greek language, from which this word is translated as "measurement" or "rhythm". Most literary scholars define rhyme as the consonance of the endings of two or more words. Thus, words can form rhyming pairs with each other, which is used successfully in poetic texts.

It is important that representatives of different parts of speech can rhyme, i.e. grammatical features in no way affect the ability of words to rhyme.

There are several ways to classify rhymes. The first one is related to the place of stress in rhyming words. The two main varieties in this situation are masculine (stress falls on the last syllable, for example: no - answer) and feminine (stress falls on the penultimate syllable, for example: cloud - little thing).

In addition, exact and inexact types of rhymes are also distinguished. In the first case, the endings of a pair of words completely coincide with each other phonetically, while in the second, there may be some discrepancies between them (for example, one word may end in a vowel, and the second in a combination of vowel + [й]).

In order to facilitate the selection of rhyming pairs, there are special rhyming dictionaries that already contain words of different parts of speech with the same endings.

Examples of rhymes

Having determined what a rhyme is and what features it has, let's give examples of rhymes for the word "night":

  • Daughter.
  • Bump.
  • Kidney.
  • Kvochka (colloquial name for chicken).
  • Point.
  • Lobe (soft part of the ear).
  • Barrel.
  • Single.

All the rhymes listed above are nouns in the nominative case. However, the rhyming pair does not have to be in the initial form. By the word "night" you can also pick up rhymes in the form of nouns in the form of a singular, masculine, genitive case. For example:

  • Bell.
  • Puppy.
  • Son.
  • Lock.
  • Piece.
  • Leaf.

At the same time, there will be much more rhyming words in the second group.

Stepan

Accurate - juicy, durable, urgent, floral, durable, extracurricular, stock, lowercase.

Rattle - toy, drying, feeder, humpback, frog, spinner, skull, freckle, spinner.

Night - a line, a bump, a kidney, a dot, a shirt, a chain, a lobe, a daughter, a cheek.

Squirrel - arrow, plate, wall.

Bird - kitty, skirmish, particle, match, master key, plug, titmouse, technical, strawberry, eyelash.

Book - haircut, latch, movement, affair, latch, stalk, ankle.

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Funny pairs of English words

The English language doesn't seem too poetic to me, but it is a pleasure to pronounce and hear some English words. For example: higgledy piggledy, hugger mugger, topsy turvy and pell mell. Most of these words rhyme, that is, they have the same final sound, but a different initial one.

The combination of similarities and differences can give us a little push to understand the meaning of the couple, because they all mean the same thing - a situation where everything is confused, in a mess, upside down or scattered everywhere. For example: “My house is all topsy turvy, everything is all over the place” or “Sorry everything is so higgledy piggledy, I will tidy up later“.

Other interesting-sounding examples of rhyming compounds include: hurly burly, super duper, itty bitty, razzle-dazzle, bees knees, and lovey dovey. In most of these stable combinations, the first word conveys the possible meaning of the whole couple, which the second word reinforces, for example, lovey from love and dovey from dove (a dove symbolizing love) are combined to describe an overly sentimental expression of love.

Other compound words include nitty gritty (as in the sentence “Let's get down to the nitty gritty” – let's get down to business) and wheeler dealer (“He's a bit of a wheeler dealer“, which means a person who cleverly uses any opportunities for self-enrichment).

Dilly dally is another interesting sounding combination made popular by entertainer Mary Lloyd. This verb, consisting of two words with the same consonant sounds, means “to hesitate”, “to waste time, not daring to do something”. Another similar word that we all know is ping pong, or table tennis. Zig zag, wishy washy, see saw, and mish mash are other examples of common compound words formed by consonants.

There are also phrases that can be used separately, but in direct proximity carry a greater semantic charge, for example: “They were a dream team the year they won the double.”

There are also short phrases of two words connected by an article or conjunction, for example: “I want some peace and quiet“.


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