English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Orange, purple, magenta, chartreuse...this poem is going very badly.

2006-07-01 19:08:58 · 16 answers · asked by Nightwalker 3 in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

16 answers

i don't think these people understand that you're hinting that silver, purple and orange are three words that don't have a rhyme in the entire english language.
thats why you just need to invent words.
blurple - a nicer way of saying "wet burp"
clorange - the clevage from guys using oranges to pretend they have boobs.

2006-07-03 18:08:59 · answer #1 · answered by grey.monday 1 · 2 4

the orange of the sky on the open range
earn magenta when you reach one hundred percent a day.
call it a truce in a shade of chartreuse

2006-07-01 19:17:08 · answer #2 · answered by taffneygreen 4 · 0 0

i do no longer think of i'm going to ever determine this one out. "what's poetry?" is a complicated question. Does poetry desire meter? no longer each and every thing referred to as "poetry" immediately has a sustained meter. Does poetry desire a shorter line length than a quick tale? Then a brilliant number of works could be excluded. Can a music be poetry, or is it excluded considering's sung, even however-- an prolonged time in the past-- poetry replaced into commonly spoken (and consistent with threat sung) aloud? Does poetry desire words? i think of this is the only one i would be certain on. i think of poetry desires words, yet i've got had human beings disagree with me. in case you're taking poetry classes in college presently, you will normally hear the different of your opinion. a brilliant number of scholars declare that the poet isn't unfastened to particular herself till she has broken unfastened from the detention center of rhyme and kind. This opinion is so nicely-known immediately that it variety of feels, sarcastically, narrow-minded. unfastened verse is meant to be liberating, yet i've got met many adherents who do no longer look liberated adequate to contemplate all varieties of poetry, and supply rhyme a threat. i'm hoping i've got helped some.

2016-11-01 02:01:21 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Charteuse- abuse, adduce, bruce, caboose, chartreuse, cruse, deduce, deuce, diffuse, disuse, duce, educe, effuse, excuse, footloose, goose, induce, juice, loose, misuse, mongoose, moose, mousse, nonuse, noose, obtuse, papoose, perfuse, produce, profuse, proteus, puce, recluse, reduce, refuse, ruse, schuss, seduce, sluice, spruce, traduce, transduce, truce, unloose, use, vamoose, zeus

Purple (not too good...)- ample, crumple, dimple, duple, gospel, maple, opal, people, pimple, pulpal, pupal, pupil, purple, rumple, sample, scalpel, simple, staple, steeple, temple, trample, wimple

Magenta- penta, rentam amenta, argenta, armenta, fermenta, identa, lapenta, placenta, rowenta, tormenta, valenta, walenta, documenta


Couldn't find anything for Orange (if I remember right I think a teacher once told us that there isn't one either) but found these words that are egh...
challenge, expunge, lozenge, lunge, orange, plunge, scavenge, sponge

2006-07-01 20:33:30 · answer #4 · answered by ditzychik508 5 · 0 0

Orange has no rhyme in the English language. I learned it on Millionaire!

2006-07-02 09:46:17 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Magenta...placenta. Done.

2006-07-01 19:10:43 · answer #6 · answered by I-Eat-Paint-Chips 3 · 0 0

Chartreuse -- what's the use?
Purple -- people
Magenta -- benta (as in my di** is benta)
Orange -- you're up a creek

2006-07-01 19:13:21 · answer #7 · answered by westernndguy 4 · 0 0

hard to ryhme

orange
purple

easy to rhyme

green
black
white
blue
red
pink
grey
brown
yellow


you must want to ryhme orange or purple
why not use the easy colors?

2006-07-01 19:14:01 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Orange - storage

2006-07-01 19:12:41 · answer #9 · answered by vespertine•[Øblivion] 4 · 0 0

Not all poems rhyme.

2006-07-01 20:37:17 · answer #10 · answered by slobberknocker_usa 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers