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Rhymes for "ideal" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(n)
The fervour or tireless devotion for a person, cause, or ideal and determination in its furtherance; diligent enthusiasm; powerful interest.
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(adj)
Childish; trifling; silly.
Polite and well-mannered.
(v)
(transitive) To uncover; to show and display that which was hidden.
(nautical) A large beam along the underside of a ship’s hull from bow to stern.
A loud sound, or a succession of loud sounds, as of bells, thunder, cannon, shouts, laughter, of a multitude, etc.
Resembling a dream: fantastic and incongruous.
(heading) To sense or think emotionally or judgmentally.
A call to a person or an authority for a decision, help, or proof; an entreaty, an invocation.
(anatomy) The rear part of the foot, where it joins the leg.
(often followed by of) An indefinite quantity or amount; a lot (now usually qualified by great or good).
(ambitransitive) To scream with a shrill, prolonged sound.
(figuratively) A painful or trying experience.
A pinniped (Pinnipedia), particularly an earless seal (true seal) or eared seal.
(transitive) To hide something from view or from public knowledge, to try to keep something secret.
Not real or substantial; having no actual presence in reality; lacking the characteristics of reality.
A lengthy and extravagant speech or argument usually intended to persuade.
(archaeology) An upright (or formerly upright) slab containing engraved or painted decorations or inscriptions; a stela.
True, genuine, not merely nominal or apparent.
(adv)
(idiomatic) Very much; to a great extent; a lot; lots.
(transitive) To change from a liquid to solid state, perhaps due to cold; called to freeze in nontechnical usage.
To talk at length, to spiel.
(transitive) To remove the skin or outer covering of.
(transitive) To take illegally, or without the owner's permission, something owned by someone else without intending to return it.
(transitive) To cancel, invalidate, annul.
Piece by piece; in small amounts, stages, or degrees.
(falconry) To sew together the eyelids of a young hawk.
The flesh of a calf (i.e. a young bovine) used for food.
Fixed, not movable.
A person with an interest in high fidelity music and/or sound reproduction and its associated technology.
(countable) Food that is prepared and eaten, usually at a specific time, and usually in a comparatively large quantity (as opposed to a snack).
(intransitive) To rest on one's bent knees, sometimes only one; to move to such a position.
(idiomatic) A person with a great deal of power or influence, especially a high-ranking person in an organization.
(mechanics) A wheel with a toothed rim, intended to engage with others, or similar equipment, to form a gear.
Sexual attractiveness.
(UK, Scotland, dialect) A washtub.
(idiomatic, usually singular) Large number, amount, or extent; profusion.
(colloquial) To trail along; to saunter or be drawn along, carelessly, swaying in a kind of zigzag motion.
A deal that is square (equitable); a fair deal.
(music) A medieval stringed instrument similar to a violin.
(idiomatic, usually singular, often with indefinite article) Large number, amount, or extent.
(nautical) An oblong frame let down vertically through the bottom of a vessel in order to deepen the draught and sustain against a side wind.
Synonym of deal (“A particular instance of trading (buying or selling; exchanging; bartering); a transaction”).
a car that is powered by electricity
An unincorporated community in Russell County, Alabama, United States.
A circular device capable of rotating on its axis, facilitating movement or transportation or performing labour in machines.
Any freshwater fish of the order Anguilliformes, which are elongated and resemble snakes.
A breakfast cereal made from rolled oats, cooked in milk and/or water.
The white poplar (Populus alba).
Of or pertaining to the cornea.
(countable, uncountable, literally) The skin of an orange, including the pith.
(pyrotechnics) A firework that rotates when lit.
A domestic device for making yarn or thread; having a single spindle and a wheel driven by hand or foot.
(transitive) To break the seal of (something) in order to open it.
(Buddhism) A rotating cylinder either inscribed with or containing prayers, mainly used by Tibetan Buddhists.
(nautical) A type of keel common in sailing yachts, its shape resembling the fin of a fish.
Alternative spelling of fishmeal. [Ground dried fish, used mainly for livestock feed.]
A male given name from Irish, transferred from the surname.
Alternative form of daisywheel. [A daisywheel printer.]
A large wheel turned by treading, climbing, or pushing with the feet upon its periphery, as for example in a treadmill.
(transitive) To seal (something) again (in any sense of "apply a seal to").
Alternative form of ceil. [(transitive) To line or finish (a surface, such as a wall), with plaster, stucco, thin boards, or similar.]
Alternative form of creel (“basket”). [A woven basket, especially a wicker basket.]
Alternative form of chield. [(Scotland) A man; a fellow, chap.]
A surname.
(informal) A transaction of very large size.
Archaic spelling of deal. [(transitive) To distribute among a number of recipients, to give out as one’s portion or share.]
Dried corn (maize) milled (ground) to a meal, especially a coarse one.
(vehicles) A vehicle with skis at the front and a caterpillar track at the rear, used for travelling over snow, sometimes as sport.
A wheel-shaped control that is rotated by the driver to steer, existing in most modern land vehicles.
(countable) A short film containing news or current affairs; especially one of several shown in sequence.
The timekeeping device normally used in mechanical watches and small clocks, consisting of a wheel which oscillates due to a coiled spring.
A mobile library; especially, a large van designed to transport a portion of some library's collection.
Any of a range of alloys of iron and carbon whose properties depend on the proportion of carbon.
A wheel, propelled by running or falling water, used to power machinery.
Any of various large marine eels of the family Congridae, having no scales and found in temperate and tropical coastal waters.
(strictly) Electrophorus electricus, a species of fish resembling an eel (though not related) that is capable of generating powerful electric shocks.
Any of various steels having a lower proportion of carbon than hardenable steels, rendering them softer and more malleable and ductile.
Synonym of steering wheel.
(chemistry, industrial) steel that contains approximately 6% of nickel, increasing its strength
(nautical) A large wheel, fitted with paddles, used to propel a vessel (especially a paddle steamer)