Rhyming words with apart


244 best rhymes for 'apart'

1 syllable

  • Part
  • Start
  • Smart
  • Heart
  • Card
  • Scarred
  • Guard
  • Art
  • Spark
  • Park
  • Sharp
  • Bark
  • Yard
  • Hard
  • Shark
  • Dark
  • Mark
  • Fart
  • Dart
  • Cart

  • Chart
  • Tart
  • Bart
  • Barred
  • Mart
  • Charred
  • Stark
  • Shard
  • Starred
  • Sparred
  • Parde
  • Tarp
  • Tarred
  • Lard
  • Carp
  • Ark
  • Scarp
  • Harp
  • Clark
  • Barb

  • Marred
  • Jarred
  • Narc
  • Ard
  • Garb
  • Carb
  • Lark
  • Sark
  • Quark
  • Hark
  • Argh
  • Popped
  • Stopped
  • Bond
  • Pop
  • Stomp
  • Cost
  • Pot
  • Spot
  • Caused

  • Knocked
  • Top
  • Stop
  • Bob
  • Cocked
  • Stock
  • Chopped
  • Dropped
  • Bought
  • Charged
  • Shocked
  • Cop
  • Robbed
  • God
  • Nod
  • Cock
  • Knock
  • Want
  • Washed
  • Got

  • Not
  • Caught
  • Watched
  • Soft
  • Locked
  • Shop
  • Chop
  • Drop
  • Blonde
  • Rob
  • Doc
  • Rock
  • Shock
  • Rot
  • Dot
  • Armed
  • Shot
  • Hopped
  • Bop
  • Tock

  • Flop
  • Squad
  • Job
  • Copped
  • Block
  • Walk
  • Lock
  • Clock
  • Glock
  • Flock
  • Hop
  • Lot
  • Plot
  • Pond
  • Hot
  • Mob
  • Odd
  • Og
  • Chalk
  • Rocked

  • Crop
  • Starved
  • Parked
  • Blocked
  • Stomped
  • Sock
  • Sparked
  • Barbed
  • Prop
  • Bombed
  • Topped
  • Carved
  • Jot
  • Boxed
  • Mop
  • Aren't
  • Fond
  • Mock
  • Op
  • Stocked

  • Pod
  • Cod
  • Bossed
  • Ponte
  • Pocked
  • Scott
  • Rod
  • Spock
  • Pomp
  • Marked
  • Frog
  • Pock
  • Botched
  • Solved
  • Parched
  • Barged

2 syllables

  • Jumpstart
  • Upstart
  • Junkyard
  • Retard
  • Depart
  • Restart
  • Impart
  • Mozart
  • Rampart
  • Walmart
  • Headstart
  • Bombard
  • Discard
  • Bogart
  • Regard
  • Leinart
  • Descartes
  • Cannot
  • Backyard
  • Embark

  • Sweetheart
  • Earnhardt
  • Flowchart
  • Graveyard
  • Outsmart
  • Asgard
  • Kmart
  • Braveheart
  • Earhart
  • Neidhart
  • Bernhardt
  • Alot
  • Postcard
  • Bernard
  • Vanguard
  • Safeguard
  • Lifeguard
  • Picard
  • Benard
  • Wildcard

  • Scorecard
  • Renard
  • Ballpark
  • Schoolyard
  • Courtyard
  • Rhubarb
  • Churchyard
  • Barnyard
  • Dockyard
  • Stockyard
  • Broussard
  • Brickyard
  • Shipyard
  • Diehard
  • Blowhard
  • Monarch
  • Gerard
  • Remark
  • Aardvark
  • Unlock

  • Atop
  • Unarmed
  • Trademark
  • Postmark
  • Benchmark
  • Landmark
  • Birthmark
  • Spongebob
  • Denmark
  • Bookmark
  • Hallmark
  • Primark
  • Skylark

3 syllables

  • Bonaparte
  • Boulevard
  • Leotard
  • Leonhard
  • Lionheart
  • Disregard
  • Counterpart
  • Bodyguard
  • Mastercard
  • Disembark
  • Correspond
  • Watermark
  • Vagabond
  • Astronaut
  • Debutante

Want to find rhymes for another word? Try our amazing rhyming dictionary.


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Near rhymes with apartB-Rhymes | B-Rhymes

  Word Pronunciation Score ?
1 petard puhtarr_d 3938 Definition
2 part parr_t 3901 Definition
3 impart imparr_t 3901 Definition
4 depart diparr_t 3901 Definition
5 bombard bombarr_d 3893 Definition
6 bart barr_t 3892 Definition
7 cart karr_t 3892 Definition
8 start s_tarr_t 3892 Definition
9 tart tarr_t 3892 Definition
10 bonaparte buh_unuhparr_t 3877 Definition
11 canard kuhnarr_d 3827 Definition
12 canards kuhnarr_d_z 3827 Definition
13 sherard shuhrarr_d 3827 Definition
14 counterpart kah_uuntuhrparr_t 3817 Definition
15 spark s_parr_k 3806 Definition
16 parks parr_k_s 3806 Definition
17 parke parr_k 3806 Definition
18 park parr_k 3806 Definition
19 discard dis_karr_d 3797 Definition
20 clarke k_larr_k 3797 Definition
21 clark k_larr_k 3797 Definition
22 carp karr_p 3797 Definition
23 card karr_d 3797 Definition
24 disembark disembarr_k 3797 Definition
25 embark embarr_k 3797 Definition
26 quark k_warr_k 3797 Definition
27 retard ritarr_d 3797 Definition
28 scarp s_karr_p 3797 Definition
29 scarred s_karr_d 3797 Definition
30 stark s_tarr_k 3797 Definition
31 dark darr_k 3786 Definition
32 disregard disrigarr_d 3786 Definition
33 garde garr_d 3786 Definition
34 guard garr_d 3786 Definition
35 regard rigarr_d 3786 Definition
36 leotard leeuhtarr_d 3773 Definition
37 hobart huh_uubarr_t 3758 Definition
38 fart farr_t 3756 Definition
39 bogart buh_uugarr_t 3748 Definition
40 rampart raamparr_t 3721 Definition
41 forepart fawrparr_t 3721 Definition
42 carte karr_t 3712 Definition
43 cartes karr_t_s 3712 Definition
44 descartes de_ikarr_t 3712 Definition
45 handcart haan_dkarr_t 3712 Definition
46 redstart reds_tarr_t 3712 Definition
47 upstart aps_tarr_t 3712 Definition
48 stoddard s_todarr_d 3708 Definition
49 goddard godarr_d 3708 Definition
50 dart darr_t 3701 Definition
51 stuttgart sh_tutgarr_t 3701 Definition
52 foulard fuularr_d 3698 Definition
53 chart charr_t 3694 Definition
54 hart harr_t 3694 Definition
55 heart harr_t 3694 Definition
56 hearts harr_t_s 3694 Definition
57 mart marr_t 3694 Definition
58 outsmart ah_uuts_marr_t 3694 Definition
59 smart s_marr_t 3694 Definition
60 smarts s_marr_t_s 3694 Definition
61 moorpark morparr_k 3693 Definition
62 bicarb bah_ikarr_b 3691 Definition
63 lard larr_d 3686 Definition
64 lark larr_k 3686 Definition
65 sherrard sherrarr_d 3686 Definition
66 yard yarr_d 3686 Definition
67 yards yarr_d_s 3686 Definition
68 lombard lombarr_d 3683 Definition
69 garb garr_b 3680 Definition
70 autarch awtarr_k 3664 Definition
71 dotard duh_uutarr_d 3663 Definition
72 spikenard s_pah_ikuhnarr_d 3662 Definition
73 infarct infarr_k_t 3662 Definition
74 abort uhbawr_t 3660 Definition
75 support suhpawr_t 3655 Definition
76 ballpark bawlparr_k 3644 Definition
77 savoyard saavwah_iarr_d 3641 Definition
78 ark arr_k 3641 Definition
79 arc arr_k 3641 Definition
80 lionheart lah_iuhnharr_t 3625 Definition
81 postcard puh_uus_tkarr_d 3618 Definition
82 bollard bolarr_d 3617 Definition
83 bard barr_d 3617 Definition
84 bark barr_k 3617 Definition
85 barque barr_k 3617 Definition
86 barred barr_d 3617 Definition
87 cark karr_k 3617 Definition
88 scorecard s_kawrkarr_d 3617 Definition
89 tetrarch tet_rarr_k 3617 Definition
90 purport puhrpawr_t 3610 Definition
91 bodyguard bodigarr_d 3606 Definition
92 fireguard fah_i_uhrgarr_d 3606 Definition
93 mudguard madgarr_d 3606 Definition
94 oligarch oligarr_k 3606 Definition
95 rearguard reergarr_d 3606 Definition
96 safeguard se_ifgarr_d 3606 Definition
97 vanguard vaangarr_d 3606 Definition
98 mozart muh_uutzarr_t 3602 Definition
99 contort kuhntawr_t 3600 Definition

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B-Rhymes is a rhyming dictionary that's not stuck up about what does and doesn't rhyme. As well as regular rhymes, it gives you words that sound good together even though they don't technically rhyme.

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SOUNDS, RHYMS, FORMS... | Science and Life

Nikolai Shulgovsky (on the right, penultimate in the first row) - a student of St. Petersburg University, 1908 (published for the first time).

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Rhymes, that is, consonant endings of words, play an important role in versification. Rhyme is an important formative element in verse and its special sound beauty. In addition, the sounds of speech themselves play an important role in the poem, for example, to depict some sound phenomenon in life and nature. There are even special (onomatopoeic) words that either literally imitate the natural phenomena they denote by sounds, or express them conditionally. The first group includes such words as, for example, buzz, whistle, whistle, crunch, crunch, howl, howl, etc. The second group includes conditional ones, for example: ah! Alas! Oh oh oh! ouch! Oh! ha, ha, ha! hee, hee! ding, ding, ding! etc., similar to exclamations issued by people on appropriate occasions, or to the sounds of known objects.

But, in addition to special words and by combining ordinary ones, such combinations of sounds can be obtained that more or less closely express any natural sounds.

Of course, in verse it is necessary to avoid ugly, any whistling, hissing, etc. consonances. It would be strange if a verse declaring love were built on a whistle or a buzz, or a poem depicting evening calm would be full of growling sounds. When this is done by accident, through an oversight, then this is a mistake in the verse. But sometimes a "mistake" can be - under special conditions and with a special plan - turned, on the contrary, into a virtue. Some ugly and unacceptable combinations of sounds in a verse can sometimes be used as a special artistic device. This is the case with onomatopoeia . It is often found in high poetry, for example:

1) In the sounds of verse - Alexander Sumarokov's frogs croak like this:

Oh, how, oh, how can we not speak to you, to you, gods!

Fyodor Tyutchev writes that the storm "lashes, whistles and roars."

2) In the very rhythm of the verse - the speed of horse running is conveyed in the poem by Leonid Semenov:

We raced on horseback,
The wind tore and metal,
Played in horse manes,
Flooded in deserted fields.

3) The same run in the poem by Konstantin Balmont:

Red horses, red horses,
red horses are my horses.
Their manes are bright, their twists curl,
fiery explosions, neighing in oblivion...

Ivan Krylov with the following viscous dimensions conveys the slowness of the movement of a large heavy carriage:

In July, in the heat, at midday
Loose sands, uphill
With luggage and with a family of nobles
Four sobs dragged along.

It is possible to enhance the poetic effect for the listener and reader not only by onomatopoeia, but also by playing rhymes. In this case, rhymes consist of two or more words. At one time, Dmitry Minaev was famous for such rhymes:

Your poems, though strong odor,
But the general oblivion is their fate.

Of course, both with onomatopoeia and with the game of rhymes, the poem must be constructed in such a way that the connection in rhymes is interesting, and the meaning can be comical.

Often poets create verses of the so-called enigmatic form : acrostic, mesostich, tautogram and others.

In acrostic the riddle of the writer is solved by reading the words from the first letters of the poetic lines.

In mesostih the letters that make up the "mysterious" word are lined up in the middle of the poem.

In tautogram (another name is anaphora), all words begin with the same letter:

Lazy years are easy to caress,
I love purple meadows,
I catch the levkoy glee,
I catch fragile legends.
Radiant linen lovingly sculpts
Azure caressing forests.
I love crafty lilies babble,
Flying incense petals.

V. Smirensky

Poeters manage to compose verses containing a sequence of words, the initial letters of which make up the alphabet, or verses devoid of any particular letter or several letters.

The listed techniques are poetic tricks. However, there are more complex poetic tricks, where the whole hidden essence of the poem is based on the special construction of the verse and even the whole poem. Such poetic constructions include hidden verses (crypt verses, or piecewise verses) and palindromes.

The cryptic verses (from the Greek "crypto" - I hide) are extremely difficult to perform. These are peculiar mysterious poems, which are an interesting form of poetic cryptography. In them, one must immediately embrace the entire given verse and both of its halves with consciousness. Thought spreads both horizontally and vertically, and care must be taken that, on the whole, its insidious parts are completely invisible at first sight, so that the whole poem has its own integral meaning, and each of its parts, both left and right, would have its own meaning.

Let's illustrate this with an example - read a touching declaration of love:

I promised to keep lovingly "yes" forever...
Can I now live alone in the world?
I will never be a heartless coquette.
Loving you, believe me, is fun to drink to the bottom!

An enthusiastic lucky man in ecstasy rushes to share his joy with a loved one, from whom he has no secrets. But this man is more wise in life: he is a skeptic.

In our fast-paced age, idealism is rare. A skeptic takes a love letter, reads it, wants to congratulate his friend, and suddenly ... something catches his eye. Something strange ... "Wait a minute, wait a minute," he says, and, to the horror of his interlocutor, without changing a word in the poem, reads:

Keep lovingly "yes"
Can I now
I will never
Love you, believe me!
I promised forever
in the world to live alone,
heartless coquette,
fun to drink to the bottom.

The scene is so amazing that we leave it to the amazed reader to depict it.

Another trick form of versification is palindrome . It is a phrase or verse based not on a vertical reading, but on a horizontal one. They are read the same and with the same meaning on both sides; there are two kinds of them.

The first type of palindrome represents verses that, when read as on the left, and right are pronounced the same. This is the so-called letter palindrome. FROM many people know him:

I am glad, giving,
Darya, I'm glad.
D.I.

Unfortunately, not every such palindrome is endowed with a meaning that does not require comments.

The second type of palindrome is more difficult to create, but also more interesting. It is a poem that is read from the beginning and from the end with the preservation of the same meaning, but not by letters, but by words. The first word of the poem will be its last word, the second - the penultimate, the third - the third from the end, etc. Each word of the poem, therefore, must occur twice in it. If we denote the words of the palindrome with the numbers 1, 2, 3, etc., then the scheme of a palindrome containing, for example, 8 different words, will be as follows:

1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
8 7 6 5
4 3 2 1

Here is a remarkable example of a Latin palindrome presented to Pope Pius I in the 2nd century BC. AD

Laus tua, non tua fraus, virtus, non copia rerum
Scandere te fecit hoc decus eximium.
Eximium decus hoc fecit te scandere rerum
Copia non, virtus, fraus tuf nou, tua laus.

In translation, it means:

"Your feat, not a crime, virtue, not wealth, allows you to rise to this exceptional glory. It is not wealth, but virtue that allows you to rise to this exceptional glory, not a crime, but your feat."

[As you can see, the palindrome fully meets the construction requirements. However, the attentive reader will see in it a possible, albeit hidden, meaning.

Let's try to read its second part, placing punctuation marks in it a little differently:

Eximium decus hoc fecit te scandere rerum
Copia, non virtus, fraus tuf, nou tua laus.

Let's translate the result:

"To this exceptional glory, wealth, and not virtue, your crime, and not your feat, allow you to rise."

What is it? Whether the pope guessed about such a possible metamorphosis of the text, we will probably never know, but it is obvious that the author of this poetic miniature was an inventive person. - Yu.M .]

Through the game of rhymes, you can build any poem. But such verses are also possible, the very essence of which depends on rhymes. These include monorim . In this form, the entire poem is built on one identical rhyme (reeds - breathe - silence - hurry - wilderness, etc.). Beautiful monotonous rhymes, repeated in greater numbers than in the ordinary number habitual for hearing (two or three), can create a truly artistic impression:

Heart rejoicing and tormenting,
Mournfully quiet, melodious
They roar, they roar of monotony...
That is not thunderous lightning
Red-flame burning...
Not the fires of the seething sea...
Dawns scarlet, burning...
These are flying sparks
Mournfully quiet, melodious
Single flowers - monotones.
Vl. Lebedev

Poems can be composed in the form of well recognizable objects. Such poems belong to poetry of subject form . It originated in ancient Rome. And the examples of such poems, in their appearance along the framing contour, corresponded to what was described in them: an ax, an ax, wings, an egg, a goblet, a cross, a palm tree, a tower, a trapezoid, a pyramid.

The "secret" of subject poems lies in the exact distribution of poems of various length, determined by the contours of the chosen form. It is desirable that the content poems went in unison with the purpose or properties of the subject. For example, by about the appearance of this book, its author wrote a joke-prospect in the form of a garden vases. This advertising-joking poem, placed in a "vase", mentions some forms of poetry, which are described in the book (burime, "echo", logogriff etc.):

Poets respond to all phenomena of life with verses and poems of any form and length.

So, often in collections of poems you can find a poem with a sharp thought - epigram . In modern poetry, the word "epigram" denotes a mockingly satirical (sometimes - "poisonous") poem addressed to a certain person. The advantage of epigrams is the brevity of the verse and the accuracy of the "prick". We give examples of epigrams.

Tip

You are cold and empty: winter is in your verses.
To give them heat, warm them in the fireplace.

P. Kozlov

Karamzin street

In his "History" elegance, simplicity
They prove to us without any partiality
The Necessity of Autocracy
And the charms of the whip.

A. Pushkin

As opposed to the lightness of the epigram, there is a special form of verse devoted to reflection and maxims. This is dwarf , a poem expressing some thought, mainly in the moral field, and consisting of one or more couplets. Examples:

Don't marry a brightly shining beauty:
The torch irresistibly draws moths to itself.

A. Semenov-Tyan-Shansky

In the world, always say goodbye to a person, because you don’t know -
It's not the last time you see him in your life.

N.N.

Poets do not disregard both joyful and sad events. In connection with the death and burial of a person in poetry, there is a special form of poetry - epitaph , i.e. an inscription on a monument. Its content is praise for the deceased, reasoning, moralizing, addressing a passerby, etc. Often epitaphs are written from a person buried under a monument. So, at the Volkov cemetery in St. Petersburg there is an old monument, the poem on which begins with the words:

Passerby, you are coming,
But you lie down like me...

There are also humorous epitaphs. At the Okhtensky cemetery there was a monument erected after cholera in the 30s of the 19th century. The epitaph on it was:

I spoke correctly:
Don't eat berries, Ilya.
You didn't listen to me -
I ate all the berries.
So you died, Ilya!
I spoke correctly...

But let's get back to life.

All poetic forms that we have considered require both time and labor for implementation. But there is one form that is created, or at least should be created almost instantly. This is impromptu .

This name is given to poems written immediately on occasion and very quickly, without preparation. Here is a wonderful impromptu of A. Pushkin, indignant at the fact that he was sent to work to conduct the "case of locusts." Piles of government papers could not have clarified this case better, as Pushkin found out with his inherent genius, writing the following on the cover of the "case":

Locust flew, flew
And sat down.
Sat, sat, ate everything
And flew away again.

Let's complete our short digression into the field of entertaining versification with a humorous form of poetic creativity - parody .

Parody is appreciated and loved by both readers and listeners.

The name of the parody comes from the Greek parados - singing inside out. Most likely, parody developed from satirical farces, which were given for the pleasure of the public in Ancient Hellas after the end of serious tragedies and where their content was often ridiculed.

The essence of parody (not to be confused with an epigram! - see above) is that the parodied serious work more or less retains its form, but the content is changed, which is why the thoughts and images of the main work, when applied to the new content, begin to acquire a comic shade. The main purpose of parody, of course, is mockery, although it is good-natured, but often parodies are of great benefit to the authors of serious works, pointing out to them some shortcomings or monotony of methods that they would not have noticed without parody.

For parody, either a well-known author (at least for a given moment) or a well-known (at a given time) work of his is chosen, and the parody must constantly retain the techniques of the work of the parodied author so that he is immediately recognized by the parody, even if when his name is not given. To be offended by a parody is possible only with sick pride. Usually a talented parody glorifies the person being parodied even more and, in any case, cannot offend or humiliate a genuine talent.


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