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Rhymes for "scrutinize" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(v)
(intransitive) To imagine or suspect; to conjecture; to posit with contestable premises.
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(transitive) To make great or greater in power, rank, honor, or wealth (applied to persons, countries, etc.).
(transitive) To stress, give emphasis or extra weight to (something).
(transitive) To match (something or someone which one currently perceives) to a memory of some previous encounter with the same person or thing.
(transitive) To make real; to realize.
(transitive) To subject to analysis.
(n)
(music) A repetition of a phrase, a return to an earlier theme, or a second rendition or version of a song in a programme or musical.
(transitive) To be made up of; to consist of (especially a comprehensive list of parts).
(adv)
(conjunctive) also; moreover; too.
(countable) Death; decease.
(intransitive) To move, or appear to move, physically upwards relative to the ground.
(transitive) To castigate; to scold or censure.
To make (someone or oneself) aware of some information; to inform, to notify.
To regard with contempt or scorn.
(transitive) To use one’s intellect to plan or design (something).
(transitive) To make (something) optimal.
(US, Canada, Oxford British English) Alternative spelling of utilise. [To make use of; to use.]
(transitive) To show or illustrate by example.
(intransitive) To come up from one's bed or place of repose; to get up.
(transitive) To give advice to; to offer an opinion to, as worthy or expedient to be followed.
(transitive) To become aware of, understand, or appreciate (a fact or situation, especially something which has been true for some time).
(US) To put in jeopardy, to threaten.
(intransitive) To take physical form, to appear seemingly from nowhere.
(adj)
Showing good judgement or the benefit of experience.
(transitive) To assume a tone of unjustified superiority toward; to talk down to, to treat condescendingly.
To find fault (with something).
(intransitive) to feel empathy for another person
The settlement of differences by arbitration or by consent reached by mutual concessions.
Material (such as clothing, makeup, a wig) used to alter one’s visual appearance in order to hide one's identity or assume another.
To give (something) a meaning or an importance.
(figurative) To shock or stimulate into sudden activity, as if by electric shock.
(transitive) To make as large as possible.
To force (open) with a lever; to pry.
(transitive) To be typical of.
(transitive) To combine two or more things to produce a new product.
(countable, uncountable) Activity intended to improve physical, or sometimes mental, strength and fitness.
(transitive) To tease (someone) by offering or showing them something desirable but leaving them unsatisfied.
(transitive) To oversee or direct a task or organization.
An honour or reward striven for in a competitive contest; anything offered to be competed for, or as an inducement to, or reward of, effort.
(transitive) To arrange in working order.
(transitive) To make (something) smaller or as small as possible; shrink; reduce.
(transitive) To assemble troops and their equipment in a coordinated fashion so as to be ready for war.
The time of day when the sun appears above the eastern horizon.
(transitive) To accelerate a process.
(transitive) To value, do, or choose something first, or before other things.
(transitive) To give a definite or precise form to (something).
(transitive) To treat (a person) as if they were important, or a celebrity.
(ambitransitive) To turn into vapor.
To justify a discreditable act, or irrational behaviour.
(transitive) To make stable.
(transitive) To cause great offense to (someone).
To adore excessively; to revere immoderately.
(transitive) To make something appear trivial
(transitive) To invigorate; to make energetic.
(intransitive) To be in harmonious agreement.
(transitive) To work against; to oppose (especially to incite a reaction).
American and Oxford British English standard spelling of revitalise.
(ambitransitive) To make or become familiar with something or someone.
(transitive) To make something internal; to incorporate it in oneself.
(ambitransitive) To assume or assert tentatively on uncertain grounds.
To make something up or invent it as one goes on; to proceed guided only by imagination, intuition, and guesswork rather than by a careful plan.
(transitive) To rid of microorganisms by cleaning or disinfecting.
(transitive) To calm (a person or animal) or put them to sleep using a tranquilizer dart.
(intransitive) To formulate a theory, especially about some specific subject.
(Mid-Ulster) Great, wonderful
(uncountable) Goods which are or were offered or intended for sale.
(transitive) To form a mental picture of (something); to picture (something) in the mind; to envisage.
(ambitransitive) To give a recapitulation of the salient facts; to recapitulate or review.
Not wise; lacking wisdom
(intransitive) To writhe with agony; to suffer violent anguish.
To be an epitome of.
(transitive, of a proposition) To have as a necessary consequence; to lead to (something) as a consequence.
A surname.
The authorization granted by a company to sell or distribute its goods or services in a certain area.
(transitive) To cause two or more events or actions to happen at exactly the same time or same rate, or in a time-coordinated way.
(transitive) To make (something) even, inactive or ineffective.
To render motionless; to stop moving or stop from moving.
(transitive) To make normal, to bring into alignment with an established standard.
To review, alter and amend, especially of written material.
To make (the soil) more fertile by adding nutrients to it.
To spellbind; to enthrall.
(conjunctive) In different circumstances; or else.
(transitive) To subject to a penalty, especially for the infringement of a rule or regulation.
(transitive) To be symbolic of; to represent.
(transitive) To state in items, or by particulars
(transitive) To radically or significantly change, as in a revolution.
To give something a formal or official standing.
(transitive) To make or give the appearance of being glamorous.
(gambling, dice games, idiomatic) Two ones, after rolling two dice.
The dimensions or magnitude of a thing; how big something is.
(transitive) To cut in or into with a sharp instrument; to carve; to engrave.
(intransitive, medicine, of a disease or tumor) To spread to other sites in the body; to undergo metastasis.
To grant the privilege of voting to a person or group of people.
(intransitive) To associate with others in a brotherly or friendly manner.
US and Oxford British English standard spelling of standardise.
(transitive) To render unable to move; to immobilize.