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Rhymes for "climb" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(n)
A pattern, a way of doing something; especially a pattern of thought, a system of beliefs, a conceptual framework.
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(v)
(transitive) (chemistry) Synonym of sublimate.
(adj)
First in importance, degree, or rank.
Relating to or connected with the sea or its uses (as navigation, commerce, etc.).
a glimpse
(uncountable) The inevitable progression into the future with the passing of present and past events.
(chemistry) Any inorganic material containing calcium, usually calcium oxide (quicklime) or calcium hydroxide (slaked lime).
(countable) A word that rhymes with another.
The duration of the life of someone or something.
The time of daylight; the time between sunrise and sunset.
The hours of darkness between sunset and sunrise; the night.
The period or season of summer.
(uncountable, idiomatic) A point in time at which something is considered to be utterly due or even overdue to occur; well past time.
Synonym of time period.
(informal, humorous) A close associate.
(US, Canada) A coin worth one-tenth of a dollar.
A particular region defined by its weather or climate.
The time or hour at which one retires to bed in order to sleep.
Something which amuses, and serves to make time pass agreeably.
A moment (of time).
The thick semifluid mass of partly digested food that is passed from the stomach to the duodenum.
(uncountable) Working time outside of one's regular hours.
(adv)
At an indefinite but stated time in the past or future.
A period of time when work or other activity is less intense or stops.
The season of spring, between winter and summer.
A rate of pay that is twice the normal rate (for reasons such as working on a holiday or working hazardous duty).
A short poem or song for children, mostly anonymous or handed down by folklore
Punctual or according to schedule; at the planned time.
Having been for a long time
(colloquial, countable) Difficulties; a difficult time; trouble.
Time when one is not working.
(television, radio) The block of programming on television during the middle of the evening, usually between 7:00 pm and 11:00 pm.
The time or hour at or around which lunch is normally eaten.
(informal) Used to introduce a narrative concerning a past event
The appointed time at which a meal is served or eaten.
A large criminal organization, or a group of such organizations, that deals in illegal goods and services.
The interval between the reception of a stimulus and the initiation of a response.
(often attributive) A period during which a war is in progress in a particular place.
The period of time when a nation or people is at peace, not fighting a war.
(military) A fast marching pace of 120 thirty-inch steps per minute.
A city in Orange County, in southern California, United States; the home of Disneyland.
At any time.
(Thailand, Indonesia, prostitution) A meeting with a sex worker that usually lasts the entire night.
The rhyming of words (in modern English poetry) or of stressed syllables (in old Germanic poetry) within the same line of a verse.
french sociologist and first professor of sociology at the sorbonne (1858-1917)
Alternative form of one-time (“occurring once”). [Of or pertaining to a specific period of time in the past, not extending to the present.]
(astronomy) The time taken for light to travel between two locations, especially celestial bodies.
During sequentially discrete instances.
Time spent in school; classtime
Obsolete form of rhyme. [(countable, uncountable) Rhyming verse (poetic form)]
Opposed to or aimed at preventing or punishing crime
(proscribed) Alternative spelling of every time. [At each occasion that.]
At the last possible moment; just before or within the assigned time.
(computing) The time interval between the issuing of a request to read data from or write data to a storage device and the completion of this action.
During the interval; meanwhile.
(music, uncountable) A musical form having a rhythm characterized by strong syncopation in the melody with a regularly accented accompaniment.
(informal) By a large margin; with great significance.
The time taken for a person (or human-controlled system) to respond to a request.
A coin having face value of one centime.
The official time in a particular region or time zone.
For, during, or involving less than the normal time for some activity, especially the number of hours an employee works.
The season of winter, between autumn and spring.
The time when dinner takes place, as:
The duration of a film or other recorded work.
(sports, UK) An additional period played at the end of a game if the score is tied after the standard allocation of time.
Free time.
(music) A meter of four quarter notes per measure.
in a relatively short time
The duration during which a radio or television program (or part of one) is transmitted.
(set phrase, frequency) Very often; frequently.
(physics) The characteristic time for a system to reach an equilibrium condition after a disturbance.
The time at which an entertainment event is set to begin.
(business, marketing, computing, software) The amount of time required to complete a process or fulfill a request.
at the same instant
Time in relation to specific geologic features or events recorded in the Earth's rock strata.
now and then or here and there
at the last possible moment
Synonym of apparent time.
simultaneously
bleaching powder
fragrant european mint having clusters of small violet-and-white flowers; naturalized especially in eastern north america
at a previous time
(modern usage) The statutory time as designated by civilian authorities, generally a standard time in a time zone at a fixed offset from UTC.
a caustic substance produced by heating limestone
during the intervening time