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rhymester

NOUN
  1. a writer who composes rhymes; a maker of poor verses (usually used as terms of contempt for minor or inferior poets)

How To Use rhymester In A Sentence

  • I suppose you have in mind the Stratford rhymester. The Volokh Conspiracy » Kids These Days
  • The Dutch-English rhymester Bernard Mandeville articulated the mistaken supposition in 1705.
  • The rhymester introduced all the characters; for instance: Humphrey Bold A Story of the Times of Benbow
  • These misplaced terms offend my disposition and occur only to the mind of a novice rhymester, who calls on Apollo for inspiration; for my part, I renounce him, and know nothing at all except my nature.
  • Remorse, were not, as to the eighteenth-century rhymester, merely Greek ladies draped in flowing raiment; to him they were realities, intensely focussed in himself. Watts (1817-1904)
  • And certainly not a two-bit rhymester like Steve Jackson. Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine
  • Alongside the newcomers is Morecambe-based poet and rhymester Alan Swift, who regularly performs at Spotlight and other venues.
  • Reshteh, as Perry points out, was ‘the only word for noodle known in the several 13th century Arabic cookery books and in the poems of the 14th century Persian rhymester Bushaq’.
  • A poet is always a dead rhymester, -- a philosopher, a dead dreamer. The Bishop of Cottontown A Story of the Southern Cotton Mills
  • True that there was then no life or spirit in the poetical vocabulary -- true that there was no nature in the delineations of our minor poets; but better far was such language than the slip-slop vulgarities of the present rhymester -- better far that there should be no nature in poetry, than _such_ nature as Mr Patmore has exhibited for the entertainment of his readers. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 56, Number 347, September, 1844
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