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Rhymes with across

a·cross
A a

One-syllable rhymes

  • boss — Your boss is the person in charge of the organization or department where you work.
  • cos — one of the Greek Dodecanese Islands in the SE Aegean Sea, off the SW coast of Turkey. 111 sq. mi. (287 sq. km).
  • coss — kos.
  • cross — If you cross something such as a room, a road, or an area of land or water, you move or travel to the other side of it. If you cross to a place, you move or travel over a room, road, or area of land or water in order to reach that place.
  • dos — any of several single-user, command-driven operating systems for personal computers, especially MS DOS.
  • doss — any of several single-user, command-driven operating systems for personal computers, especially MS DOS.
  • dross — waste matter; refuse.
  • gloss — an explanation or translation, by means of a marginal or interlinear note, of a technical or unusual expression in a manuscript text.
  • goss — (slang) gossip.
  • joss — JOHNNIAC Open Shop System
  • loss — detriment, disadvantage, or deprivation from failure to keep, have, or get: to bear the loss of a robbery.
  • mos — Metal Oxide Semiconductor
  • mossHoward, 1922–1987, U.S. poet, editor, and playwright.
  • oss — Office of Strategic Services
  • poss — to wash (clothes) by agitating them with a long rod, pole, etc
  • pross — to exhibit pride or haughtiness; put on airs.
  • ross — Betsy Griscom [gris-kuh m] /ˈgrɪs kəm/ (Show IPA), 1752–1836, maker of the first U.S. flag.
  • sauce — any preparation, usually liquid or semiliquid, eaten as a gravy or as a relish accompanying food.
  • schloss — a castle or palace.
  • toss — Terminal Oriented Social Science

Two-syllable rhymes

  • apple sauce — Apple sauce is a type of sauce made from puréed cooked apples.
  • beard moss — any of several green or yellow lichens of the genus Usnea, having long, threadlike stems in a tangled mass typically hanging from tree branches, and growing in a wide range of habitats from tropical zones to the Arctic.
  • bog moss — peat moss.
  • bread sauce — a milk sauce thickened with breadcrumbs and served with roast poultry, esp chicken
  • brown sauce — a sauce made from cooked fat and flour
  • club moss — any mosslike tracheophyte plant of the phylum Lycopodophyta, having erect or creeping stems covered with tiny overlapping leaves
  • cream sauce — a white sauce made from cream, butter, etc
  • greek cross — a cross consisting of an upright crossed in the middle by a horizontal piece of the same length.
  • hard sauce — a mixture of butter and confectioners' sugar, often with flavoring and cream.
  • hot sauce — any of several highly spiced, pungent condiments, especially one containing some type of pepper or chili.
  • lacrosse — a game, originated by Indians of North America, in which two 10-member teams attempt to send a small ball into each other's netted goal, each player being equipped with a crosse or stick at the end of which is a netted pocket for catching, carrying, or throwing the ball.
  • long moss — Spanish moss.
  • mint sauce — Mint sauce is a sauce made from mint leaves, vinegar, and sugar, which is often eaten with lamb.
  • peat moss — Also called bog moss. any moss, especially of the genus Sphagnum, from which peat may form.
  • recross — a structure consisting essentially of an upright and a transverse piece, used to execute persons in ancient times.
  • red cross — an international philanthropic organization (Red Cross Society) formed in consequence of the Geneva Convention of 1864, to care for the sick and wounded in war, secure neutrality of nurses, hospitals, etc., and help relieve suffering caused by pestilence, floods, fires, and other calamities.
  • rose moss — a portulaca, Portulaca grandiflora, widely cultivated for its showy flowers.
  • scale moss — any thalloid liverwort.
  • sea moss — Botany. any of certain frondlike red algae.
  • soy sauce — a salty, fermented sauce prepared from soybeans, used in East Asian cuisine.
  • spike moss — any of numerous plants of the genus Selaginella, allied to and resembling the club mosses.
  • white sauce — a sauce made of butter, flour, seasonings, and milk or sometimes chicken or veal stock; béchamel.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • at a loss — If a business produces something at a loss, they sell it at a price which is less than it cost them to produce it or buy it.
  • celtic cross — a Latin cross with a broad ring surrounding the point of intersection
  • chili sauce — a spiced sauce of chopped tomatoes, green and red sweet peppers, onions, etc.
  • cocktail sauce — any of various sauces served with a seafood cocktail, typically one consisting of ketchup, Worcestershire sauce, Tabasco sauce, horseradish, and seasonings.
  • hearing loss — diminished ability to hear
  • hunter's sauce — chasseur (def 4).
  • irish moss — a purplish-brown, cartilaginous seaweed, Chondrus crispus, of the Atlantic coasts of Europe and North America.
  • latin cross — an upright or vertical bar crossed near the top by a shorter horizontal bar.
  • lorraine cross — cross of Lorraine.
  • maltese cross — a cross having four equal arms that expand in width outward.
  • navy cross — a U.S. Navy decoration awarded for outstanding heroism in operations against an enemy.
  • northern cross — six stars in the constellation Cygnus, arranged in the form of a cross.
  • papal cross — a cross with three horizontal crosspieces.
  • reindeer moss — any of several lichens of the genus Cladonia, especially the gray, many-branched C. rangiferina, of arctic and subarctic regions, eaten by reindeer and caribou.
  • southern cross — Also called Cross. Astronomy. a southern constellation between Centaurus and Musca. Compare Northern Cross.
  • spanish moss — an epiphytic plant, Tillandsia usneoides, of the southern U.S., having narrow, grayish leaves and growing in long festoons that drape the branches of trees.
  • tartar sauce — a mayonnaise dressing for fish and seafood, usually with chopped pickles, onions, olives, capers, and green herbs added.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • barbecue sauce — a highly seasoned sauce used in barbecuing
  • calvary cross — a Latin cross with a representation of three steps beneath it
  • capital loss — A capital loss is a loss on investment property.
  • charity toss — a free shot given as a penalty for a foul
  • iceland moss — an edible lichen, Cetraria islandica, of arctic regions, containing a starchlike substance used in medicine.
  • patriarchal cross — a Latin cross having a shorter crosspiece above the customary one.
  • profit and loss — the gain and loss arising from commercial or other transactions, applied especially to an account or statement of account in bookkeeping showing gains and losses in business.
  • sign of the cross — a movement of the hand to indicate a cross, as from forehead to breast and left shoulder to right or, in the Eastern Orthodox Church, from right shoulder to left.
  • victoria cross — a British decoration awarded to soldiers and sailors for acts of conspicuous bravery in the presence of the enemy. Abbreviation: V.C.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • jerusalem cross — a cross whose four arms are each capped with a crossbar and often with a small Greek cross centered in each quadrant.
  • stations of the cross — a series of 14 crosses, often accompanied by 14 pictures or carvings, arranged in order around the walls of a church, to commemorate 14 supposed stages in Christ's journey to Calvary

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • distinguished flying cross — Military. a decoration awarded for heroic or extraordinary achievement while on aerial duty.
  • distinguished service cross — a bronze medal awarded for extraordinary heroism in military action against an armed enemy. Abbreviation: D.S.C.
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