Depending on how you pronounce orange it can be rhymed with binge, hinge, cringe, singe and impinge. Purple can be rhymed with herpal and curple, silver with wilver and pilfer, and month with grunt and grunth.
2006-11-13 17:14:19
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answer #1
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answered by Krystal H 2
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no that would be purtle to rhyme with turtle
and i cant think of anything to rhyme with orange or the others but i found this lol
SCORNGE--What the other oranges do to another orange when it leaves the tree too soon.
DORINGE--That's a door hinge in Southern Alabama.
EEYORNGE--That's how a two year old tells you that the color has gone out on the TV while she was watching Winnie The Pooh.
ARHNGE--Outside of Texas this word is pronounced "Aren't"
ABHORNGE--Someone who detests oranges.
SNORNGE--What your hubby does all night long.
SPORNGE--What you describe the orange that has sat for 6 months in the back of fridge and is now covered with mold.
FORNGE--That's four inch as pronounced by a Southern madam.
HEMAROINGE--Eat 250 oranges in a row...see what flares up first.
BINKY--Sure it doesn't rhyme with orange but it sure is fun to say!!
2006-11-13 17:29:20
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answer #2
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answered by ♥gigi♥ 7
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Orange can be rhymed with Blorenge. That's a fact I picked up on QI on BBC, hosted by Stephen Fry and starring Alan Davies. Can't think of anything for the others at present but the probably something similar for purple.
2006-11-13 17:46:56
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answer #3
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answered by Clare 4
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Derange is close enough for poetry.
Nurple is directly a rhyme for purple; hence the joke item, purple nurple.
These enquiries derived from the availability of computer review and the paucity of 20000 word vocabularies in spellcheck or 50000 on disc. Similarly, the assertion about -gry; that there are only two such words in the English langauge. [Hungry and Angry] But in the O.E.D. (or do you prefer the N.E.D. ?) there is magry, meaning dis-satisfactory; and alternate spelling maugry, similar meaning, but usually applied to animals.
Now arrange to drink some orange juice.
2006-11-13 18:15:08
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answer #4
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answered by fata minerva 3
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Orange is one of those words that famously has nothing perfectly to rhyme with it. The other one is silver. However, the Oxford Rhyming Dictionary does show both these words as having half-rhymes (such as lozenge with orange and salver with silver).
The principle of a half-rhyme in these cases is quite simple. Whereas a full and stressed rhyme (e.g. hand / stand) or even an unstressed rhyme (such as handing / standing) contain vowels that are common to both words, a half-rhyme like orange / lozenge or silver / salver (technically speaking, pararhymes) has obvious differences between vowels in certain syllables.
2006-11-13 17:31:28
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answer #5
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answered by hopeless romantic 1
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That's right, it's a known fact that orange has no rhyme, but someone on yahoo answers might actually have the word. What makes you think that they are just hanging out here waiting for someone to ask them? Are you serious?
2006-11-13 17:34:41
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Purple and turtle sound like they rhyme!!! Orange and Porridge- does that rhyme??
2006-11-13 17:30:54
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answer #7
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answered by jazzjazjazz 2
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Purple has 2 rhymes - hurple (to hobble) and curple (part of a horses saddle). Can't help with orange tho.
2006-11-13 18:29:40
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answer #8
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answered by itom200 2
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orange and purple are words which cannot be rhymed with anything.and yes purple dosent rhyme with turtle
2006-11-14 01:42:08
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answer #9
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answered by cookie 1
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Does Grange not rhyme with orange
2006-11-13 17:29:35
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answer #10
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answered by ? 6
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