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Rhymes for "scorn" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(adj)
Pitifully sad, wretched, miserable; lonely, especially from feeling abandoned, deserted, forsaken.
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(v)
To make more beautiful and attractive; to decorate.
(n)
(countable, zootomy) A hard growth of keratin that protrudes from the top of the head of certain animals, usually paired.
Given or declared under oath.
(mythology) A mythical horse, widely believed to exist until the 17th century, with a single, straight, spiraled horn projecting from its forehead.
(ambitransitive) To express sadness or sorrow for; to grieve over (especially a death).
(uncountable, informal) Pornography.
Unable to decide between multiple options.
Damaged and shabby as a result of much use.
A smooth tool that assists in putting the foot into a shoe, by sliding the heel in after the toe is in place.
Alternative spelling of low-born. [Born in a family of low status.]
A small, rounded hill.
Not yet delivered; still existing in the mother's womb.
Revived or regenerated, especially emotionally or spiritually.
Having from birth (or as if from birth) a certain quality or character; innate; inherited.
Innate, possessed by an organism at birth.
Of an idea, a piece or writing, etc.: repeated so often as to have become uninteresting; clichéd, overused, tired.
especially, Ovis canadensis, having large, curving horns.
The first child to be born to a parent or family.
In or carried by the air.
born, begotten, created, developed
To warn in advance.
Transported or transmitted by water.
Having lied under oath; perjured.
A place in England:
(chiefly uncountable) A snack food made from corn or maize kernels popped by dry heating.
Dead at birth.
(now poetic) Morning.
A breed of beef cattle, having long horns, bred in Texas and other parts of southwest United States.
Of a person, having had a haircut.
Any of several, often thorny shrubs or small trees, especially
A village and civil parish in South Cambridgeshire district, Cambridgeshire, England (OS grid ref TL3256).
Transported on the sea or ocean, especially by floating on the sea.
(historical) A type of brass horn used to signal the arrival or departure of a postrider or mailcoach.
(agriculture) The young ears of corn (maize) harvested while still in the milky stage, before the kernels fully mature.
(archaic, poetic) Frozen; intensely cold; frosty.
(chiefly US) A megaphone which electronically amplifies a person’s natural voice.
A North American mammal, Antilocapra americana, that resembles an antelope.
(music) An alto instrument of the clarinet family, pitched in F below middle C, with a range reaching down to F below that.
A city in Wayne County, Michigan, United States.
A large brass instrument in the bass range, usually referring to the modern tuba or the archaic serpent
(transitive, obsolete) To ornament; to adorn.
A tool, usually made from an animal's horn, used to load gunpowder into a gun or cannon.
(agriculture) Seed that is saved from one year's harvest for the subsequent year's planting, rather than being used to make flour etc.
Synonym of Indian corn (“variety of maize with different-coloured kernels”).
Field corn with a high soft starch content.
A surname.
corn having kernels almost entirely of soft starch
(music) A brass instrument in the baritone range that is similar to a euphonium.
To come into existence through birth.
Synonym of sweet corn.
sorghums of dry regions of asia and north africa
deciduous tree of southeastern united states and mexico
deciduous shrub of eastern and central united states having black berrylike fruit; golden-yellow in autumn
Zea mays var. amylacea, a variety of corn with a soft starchy endosperm and a thin pericarp.
a device on an automobile for making a warning noise
shrubby thorny deciduous tree of southeastern united states with white flowers and small black drupaceous fruit
somewhat climbing bushy spurge of madagascar having long woody spiny stems with few leaves and flowers with scarlet bracts
any of several perennials of the genus aletris having grasslike leaves and bitter roots reputed to cure colic
evergreen hawthorn of southeastern europe
any of various thorny shrubs of the genus pyracantha bearing small white flowers followed by hard red or orange-red berries
south african shrub having forked spines and plumlike fruit; frequently used as hedging
erect and almost thornless american hawthorn with somewhat pear-shaped berries
wild sheep of mountainous regions of western north america having massive curled horns
evergreen shrub of western united states bearing small red or black fruits
ears of corn grown for human food
corn having kernels with a hard outer layer enclosing the soft endosperm
(N)
a town in the municipality of Utrechtse Heuvelrug in the central Netherlands, in the province of Utrecht.
a river that flows from northern wyoming into the bighorn river in southern montana; site of custer's last stand
as naked as at birth
A French horn.
(somewhat dated) Pornography distributed on the Internet.
Alternative form of jet-borne. [Carried by a jet.]
carried, supported.
A stream or brook in which water flows only seasonally; a small stream or brook.
A horn of a buck.
(Commonwealth, but not Australia or New Zealand, uncountable) Any cereal plant (or its grain) that is the main crop or staple of a country or region.