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Rhymes with assure

as·sure
A a

One-syllable rhymes

  • bloorElla Reeve [reev] /riv/ (Show IPA), ("Mother Bloor") 1862–1951, U.S. labor organizer and writer.
  • boor — If you refer to someone as a boor, you think their behaviour and attitudes are rough, uneducated, and rude.
  • buhr — burstone.
  • cure — If doctors or medical treatments cure an illness or injury, they cause it to end or disappear.
  • lure — anything that attracts, entices, or allures.
  • moor — a Muslim of the mixed Berber and Arab people inhabiting NW Africa.
  • mooreArchibald Lee ("Archie") 1913–1998, U.S. boxer.
  • muirEdwin, 1887–1959, English poet.
  • nur — A hard knot in wood; a knur or knurl.
  • pure — free from anything of a different, inferior, or contaminating kind; free from extraneous matter: pure gold; pure water.
  • ruhr — a river in W Germany, flowing NW and W into the Rhine. 144 miles (232 km) long.
  • spoor — a track or trail, especially that of a wild animal pursued as game.
  • sure — free from doubt as to the reliability, character, action, etc., of something: to be sure of one's data.
  • tourGeorges de [zhawrzh duh] /ʒɔrʒ də/ (Show IPA), 1593–1652, French painter.
  • ur — an ancient Sumerian city on the Euphrates, in S Iraq: extensive excavations, especially of royal tombs.
  • your — to address as “thou.”.
  • you're — You're is the usual spoken form of 'you are'.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • allure — to entice or tempt (someone) to a person or place or to a course of action; attract
  • bonjour — hello
  • brochure — A brochure is a magazine or thin book with pictures that gives you information about a product or service.
  • couture — Couture is the designing and making of expensive fashionable clothes, or the clothes themselves.
  • de jure — De jure is used to indicate that something legally exists or is a particular thing.
  • demure — If you describe someone, usually a young woman, as demure, you mean they are quiet and rather shy, usually in a way that you like and find appealing, and behave very correctly.
  • detour — If you make a detour on a journey, you go by a route which is not the shortest way, because you want to avoid something such as a traffic jam, or because there is something you want to do on the way.
  • faith cure — a method of attempting to cure disease by prayer and religious faith.
  • for sure — free from doubt as to the reliability, character, action, etc., of something: to be sure of one's data.
  • grand tour — an extended tour of Europe, formerly regarded as a necessary part of the education of young British gentlemen.
  • impure — not pure; mixed with extraneous matter, especially of an inferior or contaminating nature: impure water and air.
  • insure — to guarantee against loss or harm.
  • inure — to accustom to hardship, difficulty, pain, etc.; toughen or harden; habituate (usually followed by to): inured to cold.
  • latourGeorges de [zhawrzh duh] /ʒɔrʒ də/ (Show IPA), 1593–1652, French painter.
  • make sure — free from doubt as to the reliability, character, action, etc., of something: to be sure of one's data.
  • manure — excrement, especially of animals, or other refuse used as fertilizer.
  • mature — complete in natural growth or development, as plant and animal forms: a mature rose bush.
  • obscure — (of meaning) not clear or plain; ambiguous, vague, or uncertain: an obscure sentence in the contract.
  • procure — to obtain or get by care, effort, or the use of special means: to procure evidence.
  • secure — free from or not exposed to danger or harm; safe.
  • unsure — not certain or confident: He arrived at the party unsure of his welcome.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • green manure — a crop of growing plants, as clover and other nitrogen-fixing plants, plowed under to enrich the soil.
  • haute couture — high fashion; the most fashionable and influential dressmaking and designing.
  • immature — not mature, ripe, developed, perfected, etc.
  • marston moor — a former moor in NE England, west of York: Cromwell's victory over the Royalists 1644.
  • premature — occurring, coming, or done too soon: a premature announcement.
  • reassure — to restore to assurance or confidence: His praise reassured me.
  • reinsure — to insure again.
  • to be sure — free from doubt as to the reliability, character, action, etc., of something: to be sure of one's data.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • kuala lumpur — a constitutional monarchy in SE Asia: a federation, comprising the former British territories of Malaya, Sabah, and Sarawak: member of the Commonwealth of Nations. 126,310 sq. mi. (327,143 sq. km). Capital: Kuala Lumpur.
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