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Rhymes with code

code
C c

One-syllable rhymes

  • blowed — a simple past tense and past participle of blow2 .
  • bode — If something bodes ill, it makes you think that something bad will happen in the future. If something bodes well, it makes you think that something good will happen.
  • bowed — Something that is bowed is curved.
  • crowed — to utter the characteristic cry of a rooster.
  • flowed — to move along in a stream: The river flowed slowly to the sea.
  • glowed — a light emitted by or as if by a substance heated to luminosity; incandescence.
  • goad — a stick with a pointed or electrically charged end, for driving cattle, oxen, etc.; prod.
  • knowed — a simple past tense and past participle of know1 .
  • load — anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo: The truck carried a load of watermelons.
  • lode — a veinlike deposit, usually metalliferous.
  • mode — fashion or style in manners, dress, etc.: He was much concerned to keep up with the latest mode.
  • node — a knot, protuberance, or knob.
  • ode — a lyric poem typically of elaborate or irregular metrical form and expressive of exalted or enthusiastic emotion.
  • owed — to be under obligation to pay or repay: to owe money to the bank; to owe the bank interest on a mortgage.
  • road — a long, narrow stretch with a smoothed or paved surface, made for traveling by motor vehicle, carriage, etc., between two or more points; street or highway.
  • rode — a simple past tense of ride.
  • rowed — a noisy dispute or quarrel; commotion.
  • sewed — to ground (a vessel) at low tide (sometimes fol by up).
  • showed — to cause or allow to be seen; exhibit; display.
  • snowed — Meteorology. a precipitation in the form of ice crystals, mainly of intricately branched, hexagonal form and often agglomerated into snowflakes, formed directly from the freezing of the water vapor in the air. Compare ice crystals, snow grains, snow pellets.
  • sowed — to scatter (seed) over land, earth, etc., for growth; plant.
  • stowed — Nautical. to put (cargo, provisions, etc.) in the places intended for them. to put (sails, spars, gear, etc.) in the proper place or condition when not in use.
  • strode — simple past tense of stride.
  • toad — any of various tailless amphibians that are close relatives of the frogs in the order Anura and that typically have dry, warty skin and are terrestrial or semiterrestrial in habit. Compare frog1 (def 1).
  • toed — having a toe: a toed clog; toed stockings.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • abode — Your abode is the place where you live.
  • bell toad — a frog, Ascaphus truei, of the northwestern U.S. and adjacent Canada, the male of which has its cloaca modified into a taillike copulatory organ.
  • bestowed — to present as a gift; give; confer (usually followed by on or upon): The trophy was bestowed upon the winner.
  • bestrode — to get or be astride of; have or place the legs on both sides of.
  • busload — A busload of people is a large number of passengers on a bus.
  • church mode — a mode belonging to a codified system of modes in use in Gregorian chant and in other music to c1600.
  • coed — A coed school or college is the same as a coeducational school or college.
  • commode — A commode is a movable piece of furniture shaped like a chair, which has a large pot below or inside it. It is used as a toilet, especially by people who are too ill to be able to walk easily.
  • corrode — If metal or stone corrodes, or is corroded, it is gradually destroyed by a chemical or by rust.
  • dead load — the intrinsic invariable weight of a structure, such as a bridge. It may also include any permanent loads attached to the structure
  • decode — If you decode a message that has been written or spoken in a code, you change it into ordinary language.
  • forebode — to foretell or predict; be an omen of; indicate beforehand; portend: clouds that forebode a storm.
  • horned toad — an insectivorous iguanid lizard of the genus Phrynosoma, of western North America, having hornlike spines on the head and a flattened body covered with spiny scales.
  • implode — to burst inward (opposed to explode).
  • live load — anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo: The truck carried a load of watermelons.
  • lymph node — any of the glandlike masses of tissue in the lymphatic vessels containing cells that become lymphocytes.
  • outmode — to cause (something) to go out of style or become obsolete.
  • plateaued — a land area having a relatively level surface considerably raised above adjoining land on at least one side, and often cut by deep canyons.
  • post road — (formerly) a road with stations for furnishing horses for postriders, mail coaches, or travelers.
  • reload — anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo: The truck carried a load of watermelons.
  • ring road — motorway around a city
  • skid road — an area of cheap barrooms and run-down hotels, frequented by alcoholics and vagrants.
  • slip road — A slip road is a road which cars use to drive on and off a motorway.
  • tree toad — tree frog.
  • trunk road — A trunk road is a major road that has been specially built for travelling long distances. A trunk road is not as wide or as fast as a motorway.
  • unbowed — not bowed or bent.
  • unload — to take the load from; remove the cargo or freight from: to unload a truck; to unload a cart.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • access road — An access road is a road which enables traffic to reach a particular place or area.
  • a la mode — A dessert à la mode is served with ice cream.
  • midwife toad — a European toad, Alytes obstetricans (family Discoglossidae), noted for its unusual breeding habits, in which mating occurs on land and the male broods the egg strings by wrapping them around his legs.
  • on the road — a novel (1957) by Jack Kerouac.
  • overrode — to prevail or have dominance over; have final authority or say over; overrule: to override one's advisers.
  • royal road — an auspicious or easy way or means to achieve something: the royal road to success.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • ascending node — the node through which an orbiting body passes as it moves to the north (opposed to descending node).
  • descending node — the node through which an orbiting body passes as it moves to the south (opposed to ascending node).
  • gregorian mode — church mode.
  • horatian ode — an ode consisting of several stanzas all of the same form.
  • pindaric ode — an ode consisting of several units, each of which is composed of a strophe and an antistrophe of identical form followed by a contrasting epode.
  • surinam toad — a South American aquatic frog, Pipa pipa, the female of which carries the eggs and tadpoles in small depressions on its back.
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