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Rhymes for "mistaken" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(adj)
Deserted; abandoned.
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(v)
(intransitive) To stop sleeping; awake.
(transitive) To receive.
(informal) In a serious romantic relationship.
(intransitive) To awaken; to cease to sleep; to be awakened; to stir.
Taken by surprise; overcome.
(transitive) To take upon oneself; to start, to embark on (a specific task etc.).
(n)
Cured meat from the sides, belly, or back of a pig.
(intransitive) To enter a place by force or illicit means.
In a state of shock or trauma.
(Norse mythology) A colossal sea monster that attacks ships and sailors, often portrayed as a giant octopus or squid.
(transitive) To reactivate or reanimate.
The act of entering a place with the intent to steal or commit some other offense; an instance of breaking and entering.
A city, the county seat of Bibb County, Georgia, United States, with which it is now consolidated as Macon-Bibb County.
Not shaken.
(figuratively, colloquial) To receive or to collect a large quantity of (something, especially money).
A fraud or deception.
Taken again.
(obsolete) To bear, give birth to. (Usually in the past participle.)
be active in
A salted and cured longitudinal half of a pig with the legs and shoulders removed.
(N)
a common Turkish forename, based on the Turkish language variant of the imperial title Khagan.
(informal) To include as an essential, pre-existing or integral part of something.
(US) Bacon made only from the loin, with no belly meat, and sold in lean medallions.
A surname.
(Japanese cuisine) The usual Japanese cultivar, Japanese radish.
A surname transferred from the given name.
Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Alban, 1st Lord Verulam, PC ("Bacon" entry in Collins English Dictionary.
a traditional inn on Bodmin Moor in Cornwall, England, which was built as a coaching inn in 1750, and has a historical association with smuggling.
Of, from, or pertaining to Jamaica, the Jamaican people or the Jamaican language.
A surname from French [in turn from Occitan]