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Rhymes with achieve

a·chieve
A a

Two-syllable rhymes

  • reeve — to fasten by placing through or around something.
  • relieve — to ease or alleviate (pain, distress, anxiety, need, etc.).
  • reprieve — to delay the impending punishment or sentence of (a condemned person).
  • retrieve — to recover or regain: to retrieve the stray ball.
  • shore leave — permission to spend time ashore, usually 48 hours or more, granted a member of a ship's company.
  • sick leave — leave from duty, work, or the like, granted because of illness.
  • twill weave — one of the basic weave structures in which the filling threads are woven over and under two or more warp yarns, producing a characteristic diagonal pattern.
  • aggrieve — to grieve; distress; afflict
  • aviv — the seventh month of the Jewish year, equivalent to Nisan of the modern Jewish calendar. Ex. 34:18.
  • believe — If you believe that something is true, you think that it is true, but you are not sure.
  • bereave — to deprive (of) something or someone valued, esp through death
  • conceive — If you cannot conceive of something, you cannot imagine it or believe it.
  • deceive — If you deceive someone, you make them believe something that is not true, usually in order to get some advantage for yourself.
  • frost heave — an uplift in soil caused by the freezing of internal moisture.
  • geneve — French name of Geneva.
  • naive — having or showing unaffected simplicity of nature or absence of artificiality; unsophisticated; ingenuous.
  • perceive — to become aware of, know, or identify by means of the senses: I perceived an object looming through the mist.
  • plain weave — the most common and tightest of basic weave structures in which the filling threads pass over and under successive warp threads and repeat the same pattern with alternate threads in the following row, producing a checkered surface.
  • qui viveon the qui vive, on the alert; watchful: Special guards were on the qui vive for trespassers.
  • reave — to take away by or as by force; plunder; rob.
  • receive — to take into one's possession (something offered or delivered): to receive many gifts.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • basket weave — a weave of fabrics resembling the weave used in basket making
  • christmas eve — Christmas Eve is the 24th of December, the day before Christmas Day.
  • disbelieve — to have no belief in; refuse or reject belief in: to disbelieve reports of UFO sightings.
  • dolman sleeve — a sleeve tapered from a very large armhole to fit closely at the wrist, used on women's garments.
  • interleave — to provide blank leaves in (a book) for notes or written comments.
  • interweave — to weave together, as threads, strands, branches, or roots.
  • misconceive — Fail to understand correctly.
  • misperceive — to understand or perceive incorrectly; misunderstand.
  • new year's eve — the night of December 31, often celebrated with merrymaking to usher in the new year at midnight.
  • preconceive — to form a conception or opinion of beforehand, as before seeing evidence or as a result of previously held prejudice.
  • satin weave — one of the basic weave structures in which the filling threads are interlaced with the warp at widely separated intervals, producing the effect of an unbroken surface.
  • tel aviv — a city in W central Israel: one of the centers of Jewish immigration following World War II.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • midsummer eve — the evening preceding Midsummer Day: formerly believed to be a time when witches and other supernatural beings caused widespread mischief.
  • on the qui viveon the qui vive, on the alert; watchful: Special guards were on the qui vive for trespassers.
  • taffeta weave — plain weave.
  • terminal leave — the final leave granted to a member of the armed forces just before discharge, equal to the total unused leave accumulated during active service.

One-syllable rhymes

  • cleave — To cleave something means to split or divide it into two separate parts, often violently.
  • cleve — Per Teodor [par tey-aw-dawr] /pær ˈteɪ ɔˌdɔr/ (Show IPA), 1840–1905, Swedish chemist.
  • eave — Usually, eaves. the overhanging lower edge of a roof.
  • greave — a piece of plate armor for the leg between the knee and the ankle, usually composed of front and back pieces.
  • grieve — to feel grief or great sorrow: She has grieved over his death for nearly three years.
  • heave — to raise or lift with effort or force; hoist: to heave a heavy ax.
  • kleve — German name of Cleves.
  • leave — to go out of or away from, as a place: to leave the house.
  • naeve — (obsolete) A naevus; a pigmented spot.
  • neve — granular snow accumulated on high mountains and subsequently compacted into glacial ice.
  • peeve — to render peevish; annoy.
  • sleeve — the part of a garment that covers the arm, varying in form and length but commonly tubular.
  • steveStephen Norman ("Steve"; "Lefty") born 1944, U.S. baseball player.
  • vive — long live; up with (a specified person or thing)
  • weave — to interlace (threads, yarns, strips, fibrous material, etc.) so as to form a fabric or material.
  • we've — We've is the usual spoken form of 'we have', especially when 'have' is an auxiliary verb.
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