Rhymes with ancestor
an·ces·tor
A a Three-syllable rhymes
- semester — (in many educational institutions) a division constituting half of the regular academic year, lasting typically from 15 to 18 weeks.
- ancestry — Your ancestry is the fact that you are descended from certain people.
- disaster — a calamitous event, especially one occurring suddenly and causing great loss of life, damage, or hardship, as a flood, airplane crash, or business failure.
- hamburger — a sandwich consisting of a cooked patty of ground or chopped beef, usually in a roll or bun, variously garnished.
- investor — to put (money) to use, by purchase or expenditure, in something offering potential profitable returns, as interest, income, or appreciation in value.
- manchester — a city in NW England: connected with the Mersey estuary by a ship canal (35½ mi. [57 km] long).
- molester — to bother, interfere with, or annoy.
- rathskeller — (in Germany) the cellar of a town hall, often used as a beer hall or restaurant.
Four-or-more syllable rhymes
- predecessor — parent
- progenitor — a biologically related ancestor: a progenitor of the species.
Two-syllable rhymes
- better — Better is the comparative of good.
- chester — a city in NW England, administrative centre of the unitary authority of Cheshire West and Chester, on the River Dee: intact surrounding walls; 16th- and 17th-century double-tier shops. Pop: 80 121 (2001)
- dresser — a dressing table or bureau.
- fester — to form pus; generate purulent matter; suppurate.
- jester — a person who is given to witticisms, jokes, and pranks.
- lester — a male given name: from the English placename “Leicester.”.
- nestor — the oldest and wisest of the Greeks in the Trojan War and a king of Pylos.
- pester — to bother persistently with petty annoyances; trouble: Don't pester me with your trivial problems.
- at rest — not moving; still
- sister — a female offspring having both parents in common with another offspring; female sibling.
- tester — the teston of Henry VIII.