Rhyming dictionary

This article is about a type of reference work used in composing poetry. For the special type of Chinese phonological dictionary, see Rime dictionary.

A rhyming dictionary is a specialist dictionary designed for use in writing poetry and lyrics. In a rhyming dictionary, words are categorized into equivalence classes that consist of words which rhyme with one another. They will also typically support several different kinds of rhymes, and possibly also alliteration as well.

Because rhyming dictionaries are based on pronunciation, they are difficult to compile. Words and rhyming patterns change their pronunciation over time and between dialects. Rhyming dictionaries for Old English, Elizabethan poetry, or Standard English would have quite different content. Rhyming dictionaries are invaluable for historical linguistics – as they record pronunciation, they can be used to reconstruct pronunciation differences and similarities that are not necessarily reflected in spelling.

A simple reverse dictionary, which collates words starting from the end, provides a rough rhyming dictionary, to the extent that spelling follows pronunciation, but a precise rhyming dictionary reflects pronunciation, not spelling.

Simple reverse dictionary

Walker's Rhyming Dictionary, one of the oldest, lists words in alphabetical order of the reversed word, with an appendix covering the differently spelled but homo-phonic endings.[1]

Examples:

WordReversedDefinition
FeluccaacculefA small open boat, s.
AngelicaacilegnaA plant, s.
BasilicaacilisabThe middle vein of the arm, a.
Vomicaacimov An encysted tumour in the lungs, a.
PicaacipThe green sickness; a printing letter, a.
SciaticaacitaicsThe hip-gout, s.
AnasarcaacrasanaA sort of dropsy, or pitting of the flesh, s.
ArmadaadamraA large fleet of ships of war, s.
CassadaadassacAn American plant, s.
ColoquintidaaditniuqolocThe bitter apple, s.
AsafoetidaaditeofasaA stinking gum, s.
CredendaadnedercArticles of faith, s. plur.
PanaceaaecanapA universal medicine; an herh, a.
IdeaaediMental imagination, s.
BoheaaehobA species of tea, s.
LeaaelGrass land enclosed, s,
FleaaelfA troublesome insect, s. -r

See also

References

  1. J A Walker (1819). A rhyming dictionary.
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