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Rhymes for "stroll" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(v)
(transitive) To exercise influence over; to suggest or dictate the behavior of.
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(ambitransitive) To persuade someone to do something which they are reluctant to do, especially by flattery or promises; to coax.
(n)
Any large number of persons or things.
An instrument with displays and an input device that is used to monitor and control an electronic system.
A hollow place or cavity; an excavation; a pit; a dent; a depression; a fissure.
A result that one is attempting to achieve.
(transitive) To praise; to make high.
One of an array of open compartments for housing pigeons in a dovecote or pigeon loft.
(education) To register as a member of an educational institution.
Any of several small, burrowing, insectivorous mammals of the family Talpidae.
The expected behaviour of an individual in a society.
(computing) The act of scrolling
(uncountable) A black or brownish black rock formed from prehistoric plant remains, composed largely of carbon and burned as a fuel.
(adj)
Entire, undivided.
A small compartment; a pigeonhole
A hole through which a button is pushed to secure a garment or some part of one.
(usually with an article) A bizarre world, where everyday rules do not apply.
Obsolete form of stroll. [To wander on foot; to ramble idly or leisurely; to rove.]
(figurative) A method of escape, especially an ambiguity or exception in a rule or law that can be exploited in order to avoid its effect.
(physics) Any object (such as a magnet, polar molecule or antenna) that is oppositely charged at two points (or poles).
A survey of people, usually statistically analyzed to gauge wider public opinion.
A young horse or other equine, especially just after birth or less than a year old.
A hole in the ground used to access the sewers or other underground vaults and installations.
A young toad or frog in its larval stage of development that lives in water, has a tail and no legs, and, like a fish, breathes through gills.
(geology) A hole formed in soluble rock by the action of water, serving to conduct surface water to an underground passage.
Passion; true commitment.
A roughly hemispherical container used to hold, mix or present food, such as salad, fruit or soup, or other items.
The hole in a lock where the key is inserted and turns.
A surname from German.
A shallow pit or other edged depression in a road's surface, especially when caused by erosion by weather or traffic.
(marine biology) The spiracle, on the top of the head, through which cetaceans breathe.
The ability to control one's desires and impulses.
(idiomatic) A bar or other local drinking establishment.
(military) A small pit dug into the ground as a shelter for protection against enemy fire.
(archaeology) A cut feature used to hold a surface timber or stone, usually much deeper than it is wide.
(British) A sinkhole; a shakehole.
(rail transport, UK) Overhead line equipment.
A list of employees who receive salary or wages, together with the amounts due to each.
An imaginary point situated where a planet's axis intersects the celestial sphere.
An official list of the officers and men in a military (or naval) unit
A special unit of the military police of the U.S. navy or the Royal Navy whose duties are to police the seamen while they are on shore leave.
To assume control, to gain power over someone or something.
To violate, especially to rape.
Archaic form of ghoul. [(mythology) A demon said to feed on corpses.]
an actor's portrayal of someone in a play
A surname.
(set phrase) To become unable to control one's emotions or actions; to abandon rationality or reason.
Cabbage.
A tall pole up which one or more flags may be raised and flown.
(zoology) An Asian wild dog, Cuon alpinus.
Alternative spelling of waterhole. [A depression in which water collects, especially one where wild animals come to drink.]
A hole in any surface that allows air or other gases to pass, especially an opening in the surface of a frozen lake etc.
(N)
the regulation of movements in organisms that possess a nervous system.
(obsolete) The head, especially the top of the head.
lignite
To make such a toast.
(aviation, aeronautics) A type of maneuver in which an aircraft makes a sharp roll of 360° about its longitudinal axis.
Synonym of border guard
(military slang) A concealed place where one can hide in safety, especially during a war; a dugout.
A sweet roll or sweet bun refers to any of a number of sweet, baked, yeast-leavened breakfast or dessert foods.
Alternative form of buttonhole. [A hole through which a button is pushed to secure a garment or some part of one.]
feathery or woolly down; filament of a feather
A finger bun.
a hole or passage made by a drill; usually made for exploratory purposes
the act of forcibly dispossessing an owner of property
Obsolete form of foal. [A young horse or other equine, especially just after birth or less than a year old.]
A control, such as inspection or testing, introduced into an industrial or business process to ensure quality.
Voluntary control of the number of children conceived, especially by the planned use of contraception.
(transitive) To fund a project; to underwrite something.
(electromagnetism) The positive pole of a magnetic dipole that seeks geographic north.
Food, such as a stew, cooked in such a dish.
A small hole, of a size that could have been made by a pin
The southernmost point on celestial bodies other than Earth.
Either of the two locations on a planet's surface at which the planet's magnetic field lines are vertical.
Activated carbon.
(basketball) A shot that is scored while the ball is in play (i.e. not a free throw).
(law, UK, Ireland) A deed that effects a change of an individual's name.
Alternative form of fish bowl. [A small, rounded, transparent, and domestic aquarium.]
Restrictions upon the development, production, stockpiling, proliferation, and usage of weapons, especially weapons of mass destruction.
A system that maintains a vehicle at constant set speed, usually until the brake or accelerator is pressed.
A small bowl of warm water placed at each seat at a formal dinner for the guests to rinse their fingers with between courses.
A region of the stratosphere over Antarctica (and a smaller one over the Arctic) that is depleted of ozone in the local spring.
A governmental restriction on the prices that can be charged for goods and services in a market.