Rhymes with chrome
chrome
C c One-syllable rhymes
- boehme — Jakob [German yah-kawp] /German ˈyɑ kɔp/ (Show IPA), Böhme, Jakob.
- comb — A comb is a flat piece of plastic or metal with narrow pointed teeth along one side, which you use to tidy your hair.
- combe — coomb
- dome — Architecture. a vault, having a circular plan and usually in the form of a portion of a sphere, so constructed as to exert an equal thrust in all directions. a domical roof or ceiling. a polygonal vault, ceiling, or roof.
- foam — a collection of minute bubbles formed on the surface of a liquid by agitation, fermentation, etc.: foam on a glass of beer.
- frome — Obsolete spelling of from.
- gloam — twilight; gloaming.
- gnome — GNU Network Object Model Environment
- holm — Hanya [hahn-ye] /ˌhɑn yɛ/ (Show IPA), 1895?–1992, U.S. dancer, choreographer, and teacher; born in Germany.
- home — Lord, Douglas-Home.
- loam — a rich, friable soil containing a relatively equal mixture of sand and silt and a somewhat smaller proportion of clay.
- mccomb — a town in S Mississippi.
- nome — a seaport in W Alaska.
- ohm — Georg Simon [gey-awrk zee-mawn] /geɪˈɔrk ˈzi mɔn/ (Show IPA), 1787–1854, German physicist.
- roam — to walk, go, or travel without a fixed purpose or direction; ramble; wander; rove: to roam about the world.
- röhm — Ernst (ernst). 1887–1934, German soldier, who organized (1921–34) Hitler's storm troops: murdered on Hitler's orders
- rome — a republic in S Europe, comprising a peninsula S of the Alps, and Sicily, Sardinia, Elba, and other smaller islands: a kingdom 1870–1946. 116,294 sq. mi. (301,200 sq. km). Capital: Rome.
- tome — a book, especially a very heavy, large, or learned book.
Two-syllable rhymes
- at home — If you feel at home, you feel comfortable in the place or situation that you are in.
- bring home — introduce to parents
- drive home — to cause to penetrate to the fullest extent
- guillaume — Charles Édouard [French sharl ey-dwar] /French ʃarl eɪˈdwar/ (Show IPA), 1861–1938, Swiss physicist: Nobel Prize 1920.
- jerome — Saint (Eusebius Hieronymus) a.d. c340–420, Christian ascetic and Biblical scholar: chief preparer of the Vulgate version of the Bible.
- rest home — a residential establishment that provides special care for convalescents and aged or infirm persons.
- shalom — Hebrew word for peace
- vendome — Louis Joseph de [lwee zhaw-zef duh] /lwi ʒɔˈzɛf də/ (Show IPA), 1654–1712, French general and marshal.
Three-syllable rhymes
- church of rome — the Roman Catholic Church
- foster home — a household in which a child is raised by someone other than its natural or adoptive parent.
- harvest home — the bringing home of the harvest.
- mental home — a home, hospital, or institution for people who are mentally ill
- mobile home — a large house trailer, designed for year-round living in one place.
- motor home — a small bus or trucklike vehicle with a roomlike area behind the driver's seat outfitted as living quarters.
- nursing home — a private residential institution equipped to care for persons unable to look after themselves, as the aged or chronically ill.
- proteome — the entire complement of proteins found in an organism over its entire life cycle, or in a particular cell type at a particular time under defined environmental conditions.
Four-or-more syllable rhymes
- funeral home — an establishment where the dead are prepared for burial or cremation, where the body may be viewed, and where funeral services are sometimes held.
- geodesic dome — a light, domelike structure developed by R. Buckminster Fuller to combine the properties of the tetrahedron and the sphere and consisting essentially of a grid of compression or tension members lying upon or parallel to great circles running in three directions in any given area, the typical form being the projection upon a sphere of an icosahedron, the triangular faces of which are filled with a symmetrical triangular, hexagonal, or quadrangular grid.
- georg simon ohm — Georg Simon [gey-awrk zee-mawn] /geɪˈɔrk ˈzi mɔn/ (Show IPA), 1787–1854, German physicist.