Class, which contains a large group of students or people of the same economic and social standing. Or also mass, which is a large group of anything.
"Comb" rhymes with "loam" and means to arrange your hair by untangling or styling it with a comb.
The synonym for group that rhymes with loud is crowd.
"Whole" rhymes with "droll" and can refer to a long stick, such as a wooden staff or pole.
"Continents" rhymes with "scales" and is a term related to geography, denoting the large landmasses on the Earth.
Town is a word that rhymes with down and is also associated with geography, as towns are specific types of human settlements.
The word you are looking for is "mass."
Some geographic rhyming words:
equator - creator
latitude - attitude, platitude
longitude - fortitude
pole - bowl, coal, dole, foal, goal, hole, mole, role, sole, soul, tole, toll
zone - bone, cone, clone, crone, drone, groan, hone, known, loan, lone, moan, phone, roan, sown, tone
temperate - commensurate, protectorate
torrid - horrid, humid, lurid, morbid, rancid
arctic - citric, hectic, tactic
hemisphere - atmosphere, biosphere, ionosphere, stratosphere, troposphere
continent - compliment, condiment, confident, congruent, consonant
ocean - lotion, motion, notion, potion
current - deterrent
tide - bide, bride, chide, dried, fried, guide, hide. pied, ride, side, sighed, tried, wide
sea - bee, chi, flea, flee, glee, he, knee, me, pea, see, tea, we, wii, ye
mountain - fountain
river - giver, liver, quiver, sliver
lake - bake, cake, fake, flake, make, quake, rake, sake, shake, take, wake
OK, so some are better than others.
Words that sound similar but do not rhyme are called homophones. Homophones are words that have the same pronunciation but different meanings or spellings.
The word that rhymes with "droll" and refers to a long stick is "pole."
Some words that rhyme with "hinge" are binge, cringe, and fringe.
I believe the city would be Duluth. Not a city but a good rhyme would be in her vermouth.
Blending involves combining individual phonemes to form a word, segmenting is breaking a word into its individual phonemes, substituting involves replacing one phoneme with another to create a new word, and deleting is removing a phoneme from a word to form a new one. Onset refers to the consonant sound at the beginning of a syllable, while rime is the vowel and any consonant sounds that follow the onset.
Qatar is the only one I can think of that actually rhymes.
Nepal, Russia and (Saudi) Arabia kind of come close.
Perhaps:
Myanmar
Sumatra
Cote d'Ivoire
Rhyme is a language feature that involves the repetition of similar sounds, typically at the end of words. It is part of the structure of a poem or song, enhancing its rhythm and musicality.
Some states that rhyme with each other are California and Florida, Nevada and Louisiana, and Vermont and Maryland.
Imp. A mischievous fellow, rhymes with blimp, and starts with an i.
A globe is spherical, and the word that rhymes with sound is round.
'Hear' and 'bear' do not rhyme because they have different vowel sounds. In 'hear,' the vowel sound is /ɪər/, while in 'bear,' the vowel sound is /ɛr/. Rhyming words typically have the same or similar vowel sounds followed by the same consonant sounds.
The word that rhymes with scorch and means a stick with a fire at one end is "torch."
Create a study schedule, break up study sessions into shorter sessions, find a quiet and comfortable study space, use active learning techniques like summarizing key points or teaching the material to someone else, and take breaks to rest and recharge.