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Rhymes for "muted" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(adj)
(figuratively) Complex, complicated, or intricate.
Relevance: 0%
Supposed or assumed to be true.
(figuratively) Ingrained, as through repeated use; entrenched; habitual or instinctive.
brought about or set up or accepted; especially long established
That has had something added in order to dilute it.
put to death as punishment
Not diluted or mixed with other substances.
(chiefly in combination) assigned a route
(v)
To enroll or enlist new members or potential employees on behalf of an employer, organization, sports team, the military, etc.
(transitive) To prove (something) to be false or incorrect.
(transitive) To begin or initiate (something); to found.
To address, as with expressions of kind wishes and courtesy; to greet; to hail.
(usually with to, for or an adverb) Suitable.
Having flutes or grooves, either for decoration or to trim weight.
Made, or proven to be, moot.
wrongfully emptied or stripped of anything of value
Attributed to another person.
Argued; not certain, agreed upon, or accepted.
Universally agreed upon; not disputed.
To pursue in a manner to do harm or cruelty to; especially, because of the victim's race, sexual identity, or adherence to a particular belief.
Wearing a boot or boots.
Made unclean or impure.
Calculated, determined by computation.
(transitive) To kill by electric shock.
constructed anew
(intransitive) To walk or travel fast; to go quickly.
Not suited to a specific purpose.
(n)
(biology) The haploid cell, produced by meiotic division of a secondary oocyte, that is a nearly mature ovum.
Containing fruit; bearing fruit.
(intransitive, US, UK, Canada) To regularly travel from one's home to one's workplace or school, or vice versa.
(slang) Drunk.
To stand out, or be prominent.
To play on a lute, or as if on a lute.
(transitive, archaic in British, current in the US) To disseminate, promulgate, or spread news, a rumour, etc.
(figurative, by extension) Having been removed from a familiar circumstance, especially suddenly and unwillingly.
(intransitive) To jump, fall, descend, etc. using such a device.
(informal, intransitive) To parachute.
(transitive) To change the route taken by something.
Not refuted.
(transitive, law) To start criminal proceedings against.
(transitive) To use in place of something else, with the same function.