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Rhymes with coarse

coarse
C c

Two-syllable rhymes

  • long horse — vaulting horse.
  • main course — Nautical. a square mainsail.
  • midcourse — the middle of a course.
  • of course — a direction or route taken or to be taken.
  • old norse — the Germanic language of medieval Scandinavia. Abbreviation: ON.
  • outsource — (of a company or organization) to purchase (goods) or subcontract (services) from an outside supplier or source.
  • perforce — of necessity; necessarily; by force of circumstance: The story must perforce be true.
  • point source — a source of radiation sufficiently distant compared to its length and width that it can be considered as a point.
  • pole horse — a horse harnessed to the tongue of a vehicle; poler; wheeler.
  • post horse — a horse kept, as at a station on a post road, for the use of persons riding post or for hire by travelers.
  • remorse — deep and painful regret for wrongdoing; compunction.
  • saddle horse — a horse bred, trained, or used for riding.
  • sea horse — any fish of the genus Hippocampus, of the pipefish family, having a prehensile tail, an elongated snout, and a head bent at right angles to the body.
  • shire horse — a large heavy breed of carthorse with long hair on the fetlocks
  • side horse — pommel horse.
  • strong force — Also called nuclear force. the short-range attractive force between baryons that holds together the nucleus of the atom.
  • task force — Navy, Military. a temporary grouping of units under one commander, formed for the purpose of carrying out a specific operation or mission.
  • weak force — a force between elementary particles that causes certain processes that take place with low probability, as radioactive beta-decay and collisions between neutrinos and other particles.
  • wheel horse — Also called wheeler. a horse, or one of the horses, harnessed behind others and nearest the front wheels of a vehicle.
  • white horse — a white-topped wave; whitecap.
  • work force — the total number of workers in a specific undertaking: a holiday for the company's work force.
  • cart horse — A cart horse is a large, powerful horse that is used to pull carts or farm machinery.
  • coach horse — a horse, usually strong and heavily built, for drawing a coach.
  • dark horse — If you describe someone as a dark horse, you mean that people know very little about them, although they may have recently had success or may be about to have success.
  • dawn horse — eohippus.
  • divorce — a divorced man.
  • dray horse — a draft horse used for pulling a dray.
  • golf course — the ground or course over which golf is played. A standard full-scale golf course has 125 to 175 acres (51 to 71 hectares), usually with 18 holes varying from 100 to 650 yards (91 to 594 meters) in length from tee to cup.
  • in force — physical power or strength possessed by a living being: He used all his force in opening the window.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • color force — Also called nuclear force. the short-range attractive force between baryons that holds together the nucleus of the atom.
  • driving force — impetus
  • field of force — the region of space surrounding a body, such as a charged particle or a magnet, within which it can exert a force on another similar body not in contact with it
  • harness horse — a horse used for pulling vehicles.
  • in due course — a direction or route taken or to be taken.
  • iron horse — a locomotive.
  • labor force — work force.
  • police force — police (def 1).
  • pommel horse — a padded, somewhat cylindrical floor-supported apparatus, similar to a vaulting horse but having two graspable pommels on top, used by men for hand-supported balancing, rotating, and swinging maneuvers.
  • quarter horse — one of a breed of strong horses developed in the U.S. for short-distance races, usually a quarter of a mile.
  • radio source — a cosmic object or phenomenon, as a galaxy, pulsar, quasar, or the remnant of a supernova or of a galactic collision, that emits radio waves.
  • reinforce — to strengthen with some added piece, support, or material: to reinforce a wall.
  • river horse — a hippopotamus.
  • rocking horse — a toy horse, as of wood, mounted on rockers or springs, on which children may ride; hobbyhorse.
  • tour de force — an exceptional achievement by an artist, author, or the like, that is unlikely to be equaled by that person or anyone else; stroke of genius: Herman Melville's Moby Dick was a tour de force.
  • trojan horse — Classical Mythology. a gigantic hollow wooden horse, left by the Greeks upon their pretended abandonment of the siege of Troy. The Trojans took it into Troy and Greek soldiers concealed in the horse opened the gates to the Greek army at night and conquered the city.
  • vaulting horse — a padded, somewhat cylindrical floor-supported apparatus, braced horizontally at an adjustable height, used for hand support and pushing off in vaulting.
  • vital force — the force that animates and perpetuates living beings and organisms.
  • walking horse — Tennessee walking horse.
  • wooden horse — Trojan horse (def 1).

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • centrifugal force — In physics, centrifugal force is the force that makes objects move outwards when they are spinning around something or travelling in a curve.
  • correspondence course — A correspondence course is a course in which you study at home, receiving your work by post and sending it back by post.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • american saddle horse — one of a breed of horses, raised originally in the U.S., that have high-stepping gaits and are bred to the three-gaited or five-gaited type.
  • plantation walking horse — one of a breed of saddle horses developed largely from Standardbred and Morgan stock.

One-syllable rhymes

  • bourse — A country's or region's bourse is its stock exchange.
  • corse — Corsica
  • course — Course is often used in the expression 'of course', or instead of 'of course' in informal spoken English. See of course.
  • force — physical power or strength possessed by a living being: He used all his force in opening the window.
  • hoarse — having a vocal tone characterized by weakness of intensity and excessive breathiness; husky: the hoarse voice of the auctioneer.
  • horse — a large, solid-hoofed, herbivorous quadruped, Equus caballus, domesticated since prehistoric times, bred in a number of varieties, and used for carrying or pulling loads, for riding, and for racing.
  • morse — Jedidiah [jed-i-dahy-uh] /ˌdʒɛd ɪˈdaɪ ə/ (Show IPA), 1761–1826, U.S. geographer and Congregational clergyman (father of Samuel F. B. Morse).
  • norse — of or relating to ancient Scandinavia, its inhabitants, or their language.
  • source — any thing or place from which something comes, arises, or is obtained; origin: Which foods are sources of calcium?
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