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Rhymes for "muse" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(v)
(transitive) To read completely.
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(n)
Improper treatment or usage; application to a wrong or bad purpose; an unjust, corrupt or wrongful practice or custom.
(transitive) To decline (a request or demand).
(transitive) To cause to become an element of something; to insert or fill.
(transitive) To spread (something) over or through as in air, water, or other matter, especially by fluid motion or passive means.
(countable, uncountable) An explanation designed to avoid or alleviate guilt or negative judgment; a plea offered in extenuation of a fault.
(intransitive, sometimes figurative) To be secreted or slowly leak.
(transitive) To use (something) incorrectly.
(colloquial, uncountable) Any alcoholic beverage.
(transitive) To entertain or occupy (someone or something) in a pleasant manner; to stir (someone) with pleasing emotions.
Information about current events disseminated by the media.
(transitive) To spread through or over (something), especially as a liquid, colour or light; to bathe.
(transitive) to puzzle, perplex, baffle, bewilder (somebody); to afflict by being complicated, contradictory, or otherwise difficult to understand
(transitive) To confuse or bewilder.
To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection.
Any major progress; such as a great innovation or discovery that overcomes a significant obstacle.
A color, or shade of color; tint; dye.
The act of using again, or in another place.
To pick; to make the choice of; to select.
(intransitive) To sleep, especially briefly; to nap, doze.
(intransitive, colloquial) To show enthusiasm.
(transitive, figurative) To make less dangerous, tense, or hostile.
(transitive) To use too much of (something); to use (it) too often.
A sea or lake voyage, especially one taken for pleasure.
(transitive, medicine) To administer a transfusion of.
(Australia, colloquial) A coward; a wuss.
That which persists or remains following the removal or elimination of other elements.
The age of two; two years old.
(transitive, formal) To avoid; to shun, to shy away from.
(sports) In a cue sport, an error in hitting the ball with the cue.
A purplish mark on the skin due to leakage of blood from capillaries under the surface that have been damaged by a blow.
(transitive, law, followed by "of") To charge with having committed a crime or offence.
(transitive) To free (someone) of a misconception or misapprehension; to unveil a falsehood held by (someone).
(British) Trousers, especially if close-fitting and tartan.
a large number or amount
A surname.
A sheet of absorbent paper, especially one that is made to be used as tissue paper, toilet paper or a handkerchief.
(intransitive) To reach or come to by way of increase; to arise or spring up because of growth or result, especially as the produce of money lent.
(sometimes humorous) An influential advisor or mentor.
Obsolete spelling of choose. [To pick; to make the choice of; to select.]
A Russian river craft used for transporting freight.
(transitive) To cease to have (something) in one's possession or capability.
(usually in the plural, informal) A feeling of sadness or depression.
(N)
"Shoes" is a song recorded by Canadian country pop singer Shania Twain.
Membership fees.
Nonstandard spelling of Jews.
An account intended as a critical evaluation of a text or a piece of work.
(transitive, intransitive) To make tea or coffee by mixing tea leaves or coffee beans with hot water.
Information which may lead one to a certain point or conclusion.
An inhibition or ban that results from social custom or emotional aversion.
(intransitive, informal) To vomit.
A bird of the family Cacatuidae with a curved beak and a zygodactyl foot.
(intransitive) To occur afterwards, as a result or effect.
(transitive, informal) To induce someone or something to leave.
(transitive) To form or shape in an oblique way; to cause to take an oblique position.
A children's game in which the players have to stand still without moving while being looked at.
(transitive) To interpret erroneously, to understand incorrectly; to misunderstand.
(transitive) To aim for, go after (a specified objective, situation etc.).
(derogatory) A rough, coarse, loud or uncouth individual.
Influenza.
(chiefly plural) The thick, dangling upper lip of certain breeds of dog, or the canine equivalent of the upper lip.
(obsolete) Praise; fame; reputation.
The game played by throwing horseshoes toward a metal stake.
A derisive shout made to indicate disapproval.
The name of the Latin-script letter Q/q.
The act of seeing or looking at something.
A waterproof woven tube enclosing a flammable substance which burns at a regular rate.
Alternative spelling of schmooze. [To talk casually, especially in order to gain an advantage or make a social connection.]
Clipping of sous-chef. [(cooking) The chef underneath the head chef in the chef's hierarchy.]
A surname from Ibero-Romance.
A formal meeting, in person, for the assessment of a candidate or applicant.
The total income received from a given source.
(archaic) A brothel.
(transitive) To file a legal action against someone, generally a non-criminal (civil) action.
A hard gelatin made by boiling bones and hides, used in solution as an adhesive; or any sticky adhesive substance.
To save from any violence, danger or evil.
a fuse cased in a tube
A coup d'état.
a fuse with a thread that screws into a socket
The state of being in alignment.
a fuse containing an explosive
a dress uniform for formal occasions
(now dialectal) To squeeze.
(hygiene) A commercial liquid soaplike product for washing hair or other fibers, such as carpets.
A cashew nut.
(phytopathology) A growth of minute powdery or webby fungi, whitish or of different colors, found on various diseased or decaying substances.
the athenian siege of syracuse (415-413 bc) was eventually won by syracuse
(dated, except strewn) To distribute objects or pieces of something over an area, especially in a random manner.
(automotive) A motor vehicle for transporting large numbers of people along roads.