Rhymes with avarice
av·a·rice
A a Two-syllable rhymes
- alice — a feminine name: dim. Elsie; var. Alicia
- chalice — A chalice is a large gold or silver cup with a stem. Chalices are used to hold wine in the Christian service of Holy Communion.
- desire — A desire is a strong wish to do or have something.
- malice — desire to inflict injury, harm, or suffering on another, either because of a hostile impulse or out of deep-seated meanness: the malice and spite of a lifelong enemy.
- poultice — a soft, moist mass of cloth, bread, meal, herbs, etc., applied hot as a medicament to the body.
Three-syllable rhymes
- amorous — If you describe someone's feelings or actions as amorous, you mean that they involve sexual desire.
- average — An average is the result that you get when you add two or more numbers together and divide the total by the number of numbers you added together.
- cancerous — Cancerous cells or growths are cells or growths that are the result of cancer.
- copious — A copious amount of something is a large amount of it.
- cowardice — Cowardice is cowardly behaviour.
- glamorous — full of glamour; charmingly or fascinatingly attractive, especially in a mysterious or magical way.
- hazardous — full of risk; perilous; risky: a hazardous journey.
- lazarus — the diseased beggar in the parable of the rich man and the beggar. Luke 16:19–31.
- rancorous — full of or showing rancor.
- rapturous — full of, feeling, or manifesting ecstatic joy or delight.
- sacrifice — the offering of animal, plant, or human life or of some material possession to a deity, as in propitiation or homage.
- slanderous — defamation; calumny: rumors full of slander.
Four-or-more syllable rhymes
- cantankerous — Someone who is cantankerous is always finding things to argue or complain about.
- precancerous — showing pathological changes that may be preliminary to malignancy.
- tetramerous — consisting of or divided into four parts.
- unglamorous — full of glamour; charmingly or fascinatingly attractive, especially in a mysterious or magical way.