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yup..

2007-01-31 23:58:09 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

4 answers

Shmorange

I try to write a poem,
It takes a really long time,
It's all pretty easy,
'Cept the part where i rhyme,

I find a good spot,
A comfortable place,
To help me think,
'Round some comfortable space,

I sigh in frustration,
It's just not enough,
I've been stuck on the same rhyme,
Twelve minutes, that's rough,

I try to calm down,
And not stab someone with a fork,
But i just want to scream,
Stupid rhyme just does'nt work,

It's been half an hour!
I've gotten nothing done,
These thirty minutes,
Have not been much fun,

Maybe i should just make up a word,
Something that sound's like 'Shmorange',
I guess that would be cheating,
But NOTHING rhymes with orange!!!

Does this answer your question?

2007-02-01 04:07:40 · answer #1 · answered by Confused 6 · 1 0

that is a hardship-loose false impression that Orange is between the most hardship-loose words in English that doesn't rhyme with the different note. The Wiktionary defines a rhyme as: "2 words are rhymes in the journey that they are less than pressure on a similar syllable, counting from the proper of the words, and are said identically from the vowel of their less than pressure syllable to the proper." to that end, for a note to rhyme with orange it does not decide on to have the completed sound 'orange' on the proper of it, it in hardship-free words needs the sound 'decision'. regardless of the reality that some pronounce it 'Ohr-enge', the european pronunciation is 'Ohr-inge', that signifies that any note ending with the sound 'inge' will rhyme with orange. There are, regardless of the indisputable fact that, 2 lesser-universal 'finished' pronunciations. Blorenge is one, and that is a mountain decision and city in Wales. the 2d is Gorringe, it truly is a surname. in the event you do not have self assurance it rhymes, the nearest approximation is door-hinge, regardless of the indisputable fact that torn hinge, or inch, a wrench, and flange have also been pronounced.

2016-12-03 07:46:38 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There is (as yet) no rhyme for orange. In fact there is a pretty hefty prize on offer for someone who can come up with one.

2007-02-01 00:27:37 · answer #3 · answered by catfish 4 · 0 0

Yes but only if you say it with a French accent.

2007-02-01 00:07:24 · answer #4 · answered by darestobelieve 4 · 0 0

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