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Rhymes with baggage

bag·gage
B b

One-syllable rhymes

  • badge — A badge is a piece of metal or cloth which you wear to show that you belong to an organization or support a cause. American English usually uses button to refer to a small round metal badge.
  • ragged — clothed in tattered garments: a ragged old man.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • acid — An acid is a chemical substance, usually a liquid, which contains hydrogen and can react with other substances to form salts. Some acids burn or dissolve other substances that they come into contact with.
  • adage — An adage is something which people often say and which expresses a general truth about some aspect of life.
  • added — You use added to say that something has more of a particular thing or quality.
  • babbage — Charles 1792–1871, English mathematician and inventor, who built a calculating machine that anticipated the modern electronic computer
  • bandage — A bandage is a long strip of cloth which is wrapped around a wounded part of someone's body to protect or support it.
  • cabbage — A cabbage is a round vegetable with white, green or purple leaves that is usually eaten cooked.
  • carriage — A carriage is an old-fashioned vehicle, usually for a small number of passengers, which is pulled by horses.
  • challenge — A challenge is something new and difficult which requires great effort and determination.
  • courage — Courage is the quality shown by someone who decides to do something difficult or dangerous, even though they may be afraid.
  • damage — To damage an object means to break it, spoil it physically, or stop it from working properly.
  • damaged — injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness: The storm did considerable damage to the crops.
  • habit — an acquired behavior pattern regularly followed until it has become almost involuntary: the habit of looking both ways before crossing the street.
  • happen — to take place; come to pass; occur: Something interesting is always happening in New York.
  • havoc — great destruction or devastation; ruinous damage.
  • knowledge — acquaintance with facts, truths, or principles, as from study or investigation; general erudition: knowledge of many things.
  • language — a body of words and the systems for their use common to a people who are of the same community or nation, the same geographical area, or the same cultural tradition: the two languages of Belgium; a Bantu language; the French language; the Yiddish language.
  • lavish — expended, bestowed, or occurring in profusion: lavish spending.
  • luggage — suitcases, trunks, etc.; baggage.
  • maggot — a soft-bodied, legless larva of certain flies.
  • manage — to bring about or succeed in accomplishing, sometimes despite difficulty or hardship: She managed to see the governor. How does she manage it on such a small income?
  • message — a communication containing some information, news, advice, request, or the like, sent by messenger, telephone, email, or other means.
  • orange — methyl orange.
  • package — a bundle of something, usually of small or medium size, that is packed and wrapped or boxed; parcel.
  • passage — a slow, cadenced trot executed with great elevation of the feet and characterized by a moment of suspension before the feet strike the ground.
  • rabbit — any of several soft-furred, large-eared, rodentlike burrowing mammals of the family Leporidae, allied with the hares and pikas in the order Lagomorpha, having a divided upper lip and long hind legs, usually smaller than the hares and mainly distinguished from them by bearing blind and furless young in nests rather than fully developed young in the open.
  • radish — the crisp, pungent, edible root of the plant, Raphanus sativus, of the mustard family, usually eaten raw.
  • ravage — to work havoc upon; damage or mar by ravages: a face ravaged by grief.
  • salvage — the act of saving a ship or its cargo from perils of the seas.
  • savage — fierce, ferocious, or cruel; untamed: savage beasts.
  • status — the position of an individual in relation to another or others, especially in regard to social or professional standing.
  • travel — to go from one place to another, as by car, train, plane, or ship; take a trip; journey: to travel for pleasure.
  • vanish — to disappear from sight, especially quickly; become invisible: The frost vanished when the sun came out.
  • vantage — a position, condition, or place affording some advantage or a commanding view.
  • voyage — a course of travel or passage, especially a long journey by water to a distant place.
  • wreckage — act of wrecking; state of being wrecked.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • advantage — An advantage is something that puts you in a better position than other people.
  • skunk cabbage — a low, fetid, broad-leaved North American plant, Symplocarpus foetidus, of the arum family, having a brownish-purple and green mottled spathe surrounding a stout spadix, growing in moist ground.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • chinese cabbage — a Chinese plant, Brassica pekinensis, that is related to the cabbage and has crisp edible leaves growing in a loose cylindrical head
  • savoy cabbage — a variety of cabbage having a compact head of crinkled, blistered leaves.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

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