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Rhymes with chook

chook
C c

One-syllable rhymes

  • book — A book is a number of pieces of paper, usually with words printed on them, which are fastened together and fixed inside a cover of stronger paper or cardboard. Books contain information, stories, or poetry, for example.
  • brook — to bear; tolerate
  • brooke — Alan Francis
  • cook — When you cook a meal, you prepare food for eating by heating it.
  • crook — A crook is a dishonest person or a criminal.
  • dukeEdward Kennedy ("Duke") 1899–1974, U.S. jazz pianist, composer, arranger, and conductor.
  • fluke — Unlikely chance occurrence, especially a surprising piece of luck.
  • gook — a contemptuous term used to refer to a native of Southeast Asia or the South Pacific, especially a member of an enemy military force.
  • hook — a curved or angular piece of metal or other hard substance for catching, pulling, holding, or suspending something.
  • hookeRobert, 1635–1703, English philosopher, microscopist, and physicist.
  • juke — to make a move intended to deceive (an opponent).
  • kook — an eccentric, strange, or foolish person.
  • look — to turn one's eyes toward something or in some direction in order to see: He looked toward the western horizon and saw the returning planes.
  • luke — an early Christian disciple and companion of Paul, a physician and probably a gentile: traditionally believed to be the author of the third Gospel and the Acts.
  • mook — a book with the look, design, and layout of a magazine, usually having a Japanese anime theme.
  • nook — a corner, as in a room.
  • nuke — a nuclear or thermonuclear weapon.
  • puke — vomit.
  • rook — one of two pieces of the same color that may be moved any number of unobstructed squares horizontally or vertically; castle.
  • schnook — an unimportant or stupid person; dope.
  • shook — an act or instance of shaking, rocking, swaying, etc.
  • snook — any basslike fish of the genus Centropomus, especially C. undecimalis, inhabiting waters off Florida and the West Indies and south to Brazil, valued as food and game.
  • souk — suk.
  • spook — Informal. a ghost; specter.
  • took — simple past tense of take.
  • tooke — (John) Horne [hawrn] /hɔrn/ (Show IPA), 1736–1812, English politician and philologist.
  • woukHerman, born 1915, U.S. novelist.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • baruch — a disciple of Jeremiah (Jeremiah 32–36)
  • bell book — a book in which all orders affecting the main engines of a ship are recorded.
  • black book — a book containing the names of people to be punished, blacklisted, etc
  • blood fluke — any parasitic flatworm, such as a schistosome, that lives in the blood vessels of man and other vertebrates: class Digenea
  • blue book — A blue book is an official government report or register of statistics.
  • boat hook — a hook mounted at the end of a pole, used to pull or push boats toward or away from a landing, to pick up a mooring, etc.
  • cant hook — a heavy wooden lever with a blunt tip and a hinged hook near the end: used by lumbermen in handling logs
  • chinook — a warm dry southwesterly wind blowing down the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains
  • closed book — something deemed unknown or incapable of being understood
  • cookeSir Edward, 1552–1634, English jurist and writer on law.
  • dubuque — a city in E Iowa, on the Mississippi River.
  • fake book — a collection of lead sheets for musicians, especially a songbook of standards for use by jazz instrumentalists.
  • forsook — a simple past tense of forsake.
  • fry cook — a cook who mainly prepares fried foods, as at a lunch counter.
  • good book — the Bible.
  • grand duke — the sovereign of a territory called a grand duchy, ranking next below a king.
  • kirkuk — a city in N Iraq.
  • mistook — simple past tense of mistake.
  • phone book — telephone book.
  • phrase book — a small book containing everyday phrases and sentences and their equivalents in a foreign language, written especially for travelers.
  • precook — to cook (food) partly or completely beforehand, so that it may be cooked or warmed and served quickly at a later time.
  • rebook — a handwritten or printed work of fiction or nonfiction, usually on sheets of paper fastened or bound together within covers.
  • rebuke — to express sharp, stern disapproval of; reprove; reprimand.
  • retook — simple past tense of retake.
  • source book — an original writing, as a document, record, or diary, that supplies an authoritative basis for future writing, study, evaluation, etc.
  • trade book — a book designed for the general public and available through an ordinary book dealer, as distinguished from a limited-edition book, textbook, mass market paperback, etc.
  • unhook — to detach by or as if by releasing a hook: to unhook a tractor from a trailer.
  • white book — an official report issued by a government, usually bound in white.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • account book — a booklet in which all the transactions that take place in a bank account or a company's accounts are recorded
  • comic book — A comic book is a magazine that contains stories told in pictures.
  • crochet hook — a hooked needle used for crocheting
  • liver fluke — any of various trematodes, as Fasciola hepatica, parasitic in the liver and bile ducts of domestic animals and humans.
  • overcook — Cook too much or for too long.
  • overtook — simple past tense of overtake.
  • picture book — a book consisting mainly or entirely of pictures, especially one for children who have not yet learned to read.
  • prayer book — a book containing formal prayers to be used in public or private religious devotions.
  • pruning hook — an implement with a hooked blade, used for pruning vines, branches, etc.
  • service book — a book containing the forms of worship used in divine services.
  • statute book — a book containing the laws enacted by the legislature of a state or nation.
  • talking book — a phonograph record or tape recording of readings of a book, magazine, etc., made especially for use by the blind.
  • undertook — simple past tense of undertake.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • coloring book — A coloring book is a book of simple drawings which children can color in.
  • commonplace book — a notebook in which quotations, poems, remarks, etc, that catch the owner's attention are entered
  • gobbledygook — language characterized by circumlocution and jargon, usually hard to understand: the gobbledegook of government reports.
  • reference book — a book containing useful facts or specially organized information, as an encyclopedia, dictionary, atlas, yearbook, etc.
  • telephone book — a book, directory, or the like, usually containing an alphabetical list of telephone subscribers in a city or other area, together with their addresses and telephone numbers.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • by hook or by crook — If someone says they will do something by hook or by crook, they are determined to do it, even if they have to make a great effort or use dishonest means.
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