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Rhymes with acceptance

ac·cept·ance
A a

Three-syllable rhymes

  • transcendence — the quality or state of being transcendent.
  • abundance — An abundance of something is a large quantity of it.
  • accepted — Accepted ideas are agreed by most people to be correct or reasonable.
  • accepting — amenable; open: She was always more accepting of coaching suggestions than her teammates.
  • acquaintance — An acquaintance is someone who you have met and know slightly, but not well.
  • admittance — Admittance is the act of entering a place or institution or the right to enter it.
  • appearance — When someone makes an appearance at a public event or in a broadcast, they take part in it.
  • apprentice — An apprentice is a young person who works for someone in order to learn their skill.
  • assistance — If you give someone assistance, you help them do a job or task by doing part of the work for them.
  • attendance — Someone's attendance at an event or an institution is the fact that they are present at the event or go regularly to the institution.
  • dependence — Your dependence on something or someone is your need for them in order to succeed or be able to survive.
  • difference — the state or relation of being different; dissimilarity: There is a great difference between the two.
  • importance — the quality or state of being important; consequence; significance.
  • preference — the act of preferring.
  • prejudice — an unfavorable opinion or feeling formed beforehand or without knowledge, thought, or reason.
  • reception — the act of receiving or the state of being received.
  • reference — pointer
  • reluctance — unwillingness; disinclination: reluctance to speak in public.
  • remembrance — a retained mental impression; memory.
  • repentance — deep sorrow, compunction, or contrition for a past sin, wrongdoing, or the like.
  • resentment — the feeling of displeasure or indignation at some act, remark, person, etc., regarded as causing injury or insult.
  • resistance — the act or power of resisting, opposing, or withstanding.
  • temperance — moderation or self-restraint in action, statement, etc.; self-control.
  • tolerance — a fair, objective, and permissive attitude toward those whose opinions, beliefs, practices, racial or ethnic origins, etc., differ from one's own; freedom from bigotry.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • acceptable — Acceptable activities and situations are those that most people approve of or consider to be normal.
  • acceptably — capable or worthy of being accepted.
  • independence — a city in W Missouri: starting point of the Santa Fe and Oregon trails.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • distance — the extent or amount of space between two things, points, lines, etc.
  • instance — a case or occurrence of anything: fresh instances of oppression.
  • lesson — a section into which a course of study is divided, especially a single, continuous session of formal instruction in a subject: The manual was broken down into 50 lessons.
  • patience — a female given name.
  • penance — a punishment undergone in token of penitence for sin.
  • presence — the state or fact of being present, as with others or in a place.
  • presents — being, existing, or occurring at this time or now; current: increasing respect for the present ruler of the small country.
  • purpose — the reason for which something exists or is done, made, used, etc.
  • sentence — Grammar. a grammatical unit of one or more words that expresses an independent statement, question, request, command, exclamation, etc., and that typically has a subject as well as a predicate, as in John is here. or Is John here? In print or writing, a sentence typically begins with a capital letter and ends with appropriate punctuation; in speech it displays recognizable, communicative intonation patterns and is often marked by preceding and following pauses.
  • substance — that of which a thing consists; physical matter or material: form and substance.
  • vengeance — infliction of injury, harm, humiliation, or the like, on a person by another who has been harmed by that person; violent revenge: But have you the right to vengeance?
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