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Rhymes with combine

com·bine
C c

One-syllable rhymes

  • brine — Brine is salty water, especially salty water that is used for preserving food.
  • cline — a continuous variation in form between members of a species having a wide variable geographical or ecological range
  • dine — to eat the principal meal of the day; have dinner.
  • fine — of superior or best quality; of high or highest grade: fine wine.
  • gyn — Gynecologist.
  • heine — Heinrich [hahyn-rikh] /ˈhaɪn rɪx/ (Show IPA), 1797–1856, German lyric and satiric poet, journalist, and critic.
  • jain — an adherent of Jainism.
  • klein — Felix [fee-liks;; German fey-liks] /ˈfi lɪks;; German ˈfeɪ lɪks/ (Show IPA), 1849–1925, German mathematician.
  • kline — one of a series of lines (K-series) in the x-ray spectrum of an atom corresponding to radiation (K-radiation) produced by the transition of an electron to the K-shell.
  • line — a thickness of glue, as between two veneers in a sheet of plywood.
  • mine — an excavation made in the earth for the purpose of extracting ores, coal, precious stones, etc.
  • nine — a cardinal number, eight plus one.
  • pine — Archaic. painful longing.
  • quine — Willard van Orman [awr-muh n] /ˈɔr mən/ (Show IPA), 1908–2000, U.S. philosopher and logician.
  • rhein — the Rhine.
  • rhineJoseph Banks, 1895–1980, U.S. psychologist: pioneer in parapsychology.
  • shine — to give forth or glow with light; shed or cast light.
  • shrine — a building or other shelter, often of a stately or sumptuous character, enclosing the remains or relics of a saint or other holy person and forming an object of religious veneration and pilgrimage.
  • sign — a token; indication.
  • sine — an indispensable condition; requisite.
  • spine — the spinal or vertebral column; backbone.
  • steinGertrude, 1874–1946, U.S. author in France.
  • stine — R(obert) L(awrence). born 1943, US writer, noted for his numerous bestselling horror novels for older children, esp those in the Goosebumps and Fear Street series
  • strine — Australian English.
  • swine — any stout, cloven-hoofed artiodactyl of the Old World family Suidae, having a thick hide sparsely covered with coarse hair, a disklike snout, and an often short, tasseled tail: now of worldwide distribution and hunted or raised for its meat and other products. Compare hog, pig1 , wild boar.
  • thine — to address as “thou.”.
  • tine — a sharp, projecting point or prong, as of a fork.
  • trine — threefold; triple.
  • twine — a strong thread or string composed of two or more strands twisted together.
  • tyne — a sharp, projecting point or prong, as of a fork.
  • vine — any plant having a long, slender stem that trails or creeps on the ground or climbs by winding itself about a support or holding fast with tendrils or claspers.
  • whine — to utter a low, usually nasal, complaining cry or sound, as from uneasiness, discontent, peevishness, etc.: The puppies were whining from hunger.
  • wine — the fermented juice of grapes, made in many varieties, such as red, white, sweet, dry, still, and sparkling, for use as a beverage, in cooking, in religious rites, etc., and usually having an alcoholic content of 14 percent or less.
  • zine — fanzine.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • affine — of, characterizing, or involving transformations which preserve collinearity, esp in classical geometry, those of translation, rotation and reflection in an axis
  • align — If you align yourself with a particular group, you support them because you have the same political aim.
  • aline — align
  • assign — If you assign a piece of work to someone, you give them the work to do.
  • bar line — the vertical line marking the boundary between one bar and the next
  • battle line — the line along which troops are positioned for battle
  • benign — You use benign to describe someone who is kind, gentle, and harmless.
  • black pine — A pine tree, genus Pinus, of darker foliage than most other species.
  • blush wine — any of certain wines similar in style to dry white wine although slightly pink in color: made like rosé from red-wine grapes, and often named by the grape's name preceded by “white,” as white zinfandel
  • branch line — A branch line is a railway line that goes to small towns rather than one that goes between large cities.
  • bread line — a line of people waiting to be given food as government relief or private charity
  • bus line — the route of a bus or buses.
  • chalk line — a chalked string for making a straight line on a large surface, as a wall, by holding the string taut against the surface and snapping it to transfer the chalk.
  • chow line — Alternative form of chowline.
  • cloud nine — a condition of great joy or bliss; euphoric state
  • confine — To confine something to a particular place or group means to prevent it from spreading beyond that place or group.
  • consign — To consign something or someone to a place where they will be forgotten about, or to an unpleasant situation or place, means to put them there.
  • cross vine — a woody bignoniaceous vine, Bignonia capreolata, of the southeastern US, having large trumpet-shaped reddish flowers
  • date line — international date line
  • decline — If something declines, it becomes less in quantity, importance, or strength.
  • define — to describe the nature, properties, or essential qualities of
  • design — When someone designs a garment, building, machine, or other object, they plan it and make a detailed drawing of it from which it can be built or made.
  • devine — George (Alexander Cassady). 1910–65, British stage director and actor: founded (1956) the English Stage Company in London's Royal Court Theatre
  • divine — of or relating to a god, especially the Supreme Being.
  • fault line — the intersection of a fault with the surface of the earth or other plane of reference.
  • field line — an imaginary line or curve in a field of force, as an electric field, such that the direction of the line at any point is that of the force in the field at that point.
  • flight line — an area for the servicing and maintenance of airplanes that includes parking ramps and hangars.
  • foul line — Baseball. either of the two lines connecting home plate with first and third base respectively, or their continuations to the end of the outfield.
  • goal line — the line that bounds a goal, especially the front line.
  • ground pine — any of several species of club moss, especially Lycopodium obscurum or L. complanatum.
  • high sign — a gesture, glance, or facial expression used as a surreptitious signal to warn, admonish, or inform.
  • hoop pine — a fast-growing timber tree of Australia, Araucaria cunninghamii, having rough bark with hoop-like cracks around the trunk and branches: family Araucariaceae
  • hot line — a direct telecommunications link, as a telephone line or Teletype circuit, enabling immediate communication between heads of state in an international crisis: the hot line between Washington and Moscow.
  • incline — to deviate from the vertical or horizontal; slant.
  • in line — (of an internal-combustion engine) having the cylinders ranged side by side in one or more rows along the crankshaft.
  • jack pine — a scrubby pine, Pinus banksiana, growing on tracts of poor, rocky land in Canada and the northern U.S., bearing short needles and curved cones.
  • jug wine — any inexpensive wine sold in large bottles, especially a bottle containing 1.5 liters (1.6 quarts) or more.
  • land mine — an explosive charge concealed just under the surface of the ground or of a roadway, designed to be detonated by pressure, proximity of a vehicle or person, etc.
  • laugh line — crow's-foot (def 1).
  • lead line — a line by which a lead is lowered into the water to take soundings: in deep-sea practice, divided into levels one fathom apart, variously treated as marks and deeps.
  • load line — Also called Plimsoll line. any of various lines marked on the sides of a cargo vessel to indicate the depth to which a vessel may be immersed under certain conditions. Compare freeboard (def 1a).
  • log line — the line by which a log or patent log is streamed.
  • love vine — dodder2 .
  • main line — a fashionable residential district west of Philadelphia.
  • malign — to speak harmful untruths about; speak evil of; slander; defame: to malign an honorable man.
  • may wine — a punch consisting typically of Alsatian, Moselle, or Rhine wine, flavored with woodruff.
  • nut pine — piñon (def 1).
  • opine — Hold and state as one's opinion.
  • pipe vine — the Dutchman's-pipe.
  • pitch pine — any of several pines from which pitch or turpentine is obtained.
  • plot line — Usually, plot lines. dialogue that advances the plot, as in a play or motion-picture script.
  • plumb line — a cord with a lead bob attached to one end, used to determine perpendicularity, the depth of water, etc. Compare plumb (def 1).
  • plus sign — the symbol (+) indicating summation or a positive quality.
  • punch line — the climactic phrase or sentence in a joke, speech, advertisement, or humorous story that produces the desired effect.
  • recline — to lean or lie back; rest in a recumbent position.
  • red pine — a pine, Pinus resinosa, of northeastern North America, having needles in groups of two and reddish bark.
  • red wine — wine having a predominantly red color derived from the skin pigment in the red or other dark-colored grapes used in making it.
  • refine — to bring to a fine or a pure state; free from impurities: to refine metal, sugar, or petroleum.
  • resign — to give up an office or position, often formally (often followed by from): to resign from the presidency.
  • rhine wine — any of numerous varieties of wine produced in the Rhine valley.
  • rhone wine — any of numerous varieties of wine produced in the Rhone River valley, between Lyons and the Mediterranean.
  • salt mine — a mine from which salt is excavated.
  • scotch pine — a pine, Pinus sylvestris, of Eurasia, having a reddish trunk and twisted, bluish-green needles.
  • scots pine — a coniferous tree, Pinus sylvestris, of Europe and W and N Asia, having blue-green needle-like leaves and brown cones with a small prickle on each scale: a valuable timber tree
  • screw pine — any tropical Asian tree or shrub of the genus Pandanus, having a palmlike or branched stem, long, narrow, rigid, spirally arranged leaves and aerial roots, and bearing an edible fruit.
  • scrub pine — any of several pines, as the jack pine, characterized by a scrubby or irregular manner of growth, usually found in dry, sandy soil.
  • short line — a bus or rail route covering only a limited distance.
  • sinn fein — a political organization in Ireland, founded about 1905, advocating the complete political separation from Great Britain of a unified Ireland.
  • snow line — the line, as on mountains, above which there is perpetual snow.
  • spruce pine — a tall coniferous tree, Pinus glabra, of the southeastern U.S., having smooth, gray bark and needles in bundles of two.
  • squall line — a line or extended narrow region within which squalls or thunderstorms occur, often several hundred miles long.
  • stone pine — Also called umbrella pine, parasol pine. a tree, Pinus pinea, native to southern Europe, having branches forming an umbrellalike crown and bearing edible, nutlike seeds.
  • straw wine — a usually rich or sweet wine produced from grapes partially dried on the vine or picked and dried in the sun on a bed of straw or reeds.
  • string line — string (def 17b).
  • strip mine — A strip mine is a mine in which the coal, metal, or mineral is near the surface, and so underground passages are not needed.
  • supine — lying on the back, face or front upward.
  • table wine — a wine that contains not more than 14 percent alcohol and is usually served as an accompaniment to food.
  • tag line — the last line of a play, story, speech, etc., used to clarify or dramatize a point.
  • toll line — a telephone line for long-distance calls.
  • tree line — the altitude above sea level at which timber ceases to grow.
  • trip line — (in lumbering) a line for freeing a dog hook from a log at a distance.
  • trunk line — a major long-distance transportation line.
  • v sign — a sign of victory formed by the raised index and middle fingers.
  • white line — a stripe of white paint, tiles, or the like, that marks the center or outer edge of a road.
  • white pine — a large, irregularly branched pine, Pinus strobus, of eastern North America, having gray bark and yielding a light-colored, soft, light wood of great commercial importance.
  • white wine — wine having a yellowish to amber color derived from the light-colored grapes used in production, or from dark grapes whose skins, pulp, and seeds have been removed before fermentation.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • agate line — a unit of measurement for classified advertising space, one column wide and 1⁄14 inch deep
  • altar wine — wine for use in a Eucharistic service.
  • balloon vine — a tropical tendril-climbing sapindaceous plant, Cardiospermum halicacabum, cultivated for its ornamental balloon-like seed capsules
  • bottom line — The bottom line in a decision or situation is the most important factor that you have to consider.
  • by design — If something happens or is done by design, someone does it deliberately, rather than by accident.
  • color line — A color line is the set of social, economic or political barriers that exist between different racial groups.
  • contour line — a line on a map or chart joining points of equal height or depth
  • coral vine — a Mexican climbing vine, Antigonon leptopus, of the buckwheat family, having arrow- or heart-shaped leaves and pink or white flowers.
  • credit line — A person or company's credit line is the amount of credit that they are allowed, for example, by a credit card company or a bank.
  • cypress pine — any coniferous tree of the Australian genus Callitrus, having leaves in whorls and yielding valuable timber: family Cupressaceae
  • cypress vine — a tropical American convolvulaceous climbing plant, Ipomoea pennata, having finely divided compound leaves and scarlet or white tubular flowers
  • delay line — a device in which a known delay time is introduced in the transmission of a signal. An acoustic delay line delays a sound wave by circulating it through a liquid or solid medium
  • dessert wine — A dessert wine is a sweet wine, usually a white wine, that is served with dessert.
  • disincline — Opposite of to incline; to make reluctant.
  • dollar sign — the symbol $ before a number indicating that the number represents dollars.
  • draw the line — a mark or stroke long in proportion to its breadth, made with a pen, pencil, tool, etc., on a surface: a line down the middle of the page.
  • drop a line — send a message
  • fall in line — (Idiomatic) To submit to the rules of a higher authority; obey; conform.
  • feeder line — a branch of a main transportation line, as of an airline or railroad.
  • finish line — a line marking the end of a race.
  • firing line — Military. the positions at which troops are stationed to fire upon the enemy or targets. the troops firing from this line.
  • georgia pine — longleaf pine.
  • hold the line — a mark or stroke long in proportion to its breadth, made with a pen, pencil, tool, etc., on a surface: a line down the middle of the page.
  • intertwine — Twist or twine together.
  • jeffrey pine — a conifer, Pinus jeffreyi, of high mountains in the western U.S., having long needles, large cones, and aromatic bark.
  • jersey pine — Virginia pine.
  • kudzu vine — a fast-growing Chinese and Japanese climbing vine, Pueraria lobata, of the legume family, now widespread in the southern U.S., having tuberous, starchy roots and stems: used for fiber, as food and forage, and to prevent soil erosion.
  • ledger line — Also, leger line. Also called added line. Music. a short line added when necessary above or below the staff to increase the range of the staff.
  • leger line — ledger line (def 1).
  • limber pine — a pine, Pinus flexilis, of western North America, having light, soft wood used locally for railroad ties, poles, fuel, etc.
  • longleaf pine — an American pine, Pinus palustris, valued as a source of turpentine and for its timber.
  • lubber line — a vertical line on the forward inner side of the bowl of a fixed compass, used as a reference mark indicating the heading of a vessel.
  • minus sign — the symbol (−) denoting subtraction or a negative quantity.
  • party line — the authorized, prescribed policies and practices of a group, especially of the Communist Party, usually followed by the members without deviation; official philosophy or credo.
  • percent sign — a symbol (%) for “percent”: a 10% drop in population.
  • picket line — a line of strikers or other demonstrators serving as pickets.
  • power line — a line for conducting electric power.
  • product line — all of the products carried by a manufacturer, wholesaler, or retailer.
  • realign — to arrange in a straight line; adjust according to a line.
  • reassign — to give or allocate; allot: to assign rooms at a hotel.
  • recombine — to bring into or join in a close union or whole; unite: She combined the ingredients to make the cake. They combined the two companies.
  • redefine — to state or set forth the meaning of (a word, phrase, etc.): They disagreed on how to define “liberal.”.
  • redesign — to prepare the preliminary sketch or the plans for (a work to be executed), especially to plan the form and structure of: to design a new bridge.
  • running pine — a ground pine, Lycopodium clavatum.
  • scrimmage line — line of scrimmage.
  • siegfried line — a zone of fortifications in W Germany facing the Maginot Line, constructed in the years preceding World War II.
  • silver vine — a vine, Actinidia polygama, of eastern Asia, having fragrant, white flowers and yellow, edible fruit and, in the male plant, leaves with silvery-white markings.
  • sounding line — a line weighted with a lead or plummet (sounding lead) and bearing marks to show the length paid out, used for sounding, as at sea.
  • sparkling wine — a wine that is naturally carbonated by a second fermentation.
  • static line — a line attached to a parachute pack and to a cable in an aircraft for the purpose of automatically opening the parachute after it is dropped.
  • tara vine — a leafy, woody vine, Actinidia arguta, of Japan and eastern Asia, having white flowers and yellowish, sweet, edible fruit.
  • toe the line — a mark or stroke long in proportion to its breadth, made with a pen, pencil, tool, etc., on a surface: a line down the middle of the page.
  • torrey pine — a rare pine tree, Pinus torreyana, having a rounded crown of branches, growing in a limited area on the southern coast of California.
  • trolley line — the route of a trolley car or trolley bus.
  • trumpet vine — trumpet creeper.
  • water line — Nautical. the part of the outside of a ship's hull that is just at the water level.
  • wine and dine — the fermented juice of grapes, made in many varieties, such as red, white, sweet, dry, still, and sparkling, for use as a beverage, in cooking, in religious rites, etc., and usually having an alcoholic content of 14 percent or less.
  • yellow pine — any of several North American pines yielding a strong, yellowish wood.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • assembly line — An assembly line is an arrangement of workers and machines in a factory, where each worker deals with only one part of a product. The product passes from one worker to another until it is finished.
  • australian pine — casuarina
  • boundary line — a line marking one of the edges of a playing area
  • celery pine — a New Zealand gymnosperm tree, Phyllocladus trichomanoides, with celerylike shoots and useful wood: family Phyllocladaceae
  • fortified wine — a wine, as port or sherry, to which brandy has been added in order to arrest fermentation or to increase the alcoholic content.
  • geodesic line — the shortest line lying on a given surface and connecting two given points.
  • hickory pine — bristlecone pine.
  • lateral line — the line, or system of lines, of sensory structures along the head and sides of fishes and amphibians, by which the animal is believed to detect water current and pressure changes and vibrations.
  • lay on the line — a mark or stroke long in proportion to its breadth, made with a pen, pencil, tool, etc., on a surface: a line down the middle of the page.
  • loblolly pine — a coniferous tree, Pinus taeda, of the southeastern U.S., having bundles of stout often twisted needles and blackish-gray bark.
  • lodgepole pine — a tall, narrow, slow-growing coniferous tree, Pinus contorta, of western North America, having egg-shaped cones that remain closed for years.
  • maginot line — a zone of heavy defensive fortifications erected by France along its eastern border in the years preceding World War II, but outflanked in 1940 when the German army attacked through Belgium.
  • magnetic mine — an underwater mine set off by any disturbance of its magnetic field, as by the metal hull of a ship.
  • monterey pine — a pine tree, Pinus radiata, native to coastal California, having cones that open to germinate only in the heat of a forest fire, used for reforestation and as a timber tree.
  • oregon pine — Douglas fir.
  • potato vine — a tender, woody Brazilian vine, Solanum jasminoides, of the nightshade family, having starlike, blue-tinged white flowers in clusters, grown as an ornamental.
  • poverty line — a minimum income level used as an official standard for determining the proportion of a population living in poverty.
  • production line — an arrangement of machines or sequence of operations involved with a single manufacturing operation or production process. Compare assembly line, line1 (def 29).
  • radical sign — the symbol √ or indicating extraction of a root of the quantity that follows it, as √25=5 or .
  • ship of the line — a former sailing warship armed powerfully enough to serve in the line of battle, usually having cannons ranged along two or more decks; battleship.
  • spirits of wine — alcohol (def 1).
  • transmission line — a system of conductors, as coaxial cable, a wave guide, or a pair of parallel wires, used to transmit signals.
  • umbrella pine — a Japanese evergreen tree, Sciadopitys verticillata, having linear leaves growing in umbrellalike whorls, cultivated as an ornamental.
  • virginia pine — a pine tree, Pinus virginiana, of the eastern U.S., that grows in poor soil and has needles in groups of two.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • interior design — the design and coordination of the decorative elements of the interior of a house, apartment, office, or other structural space, including color schemes, fittings, furnishings, and sometimes architectural features.
  • japanese black pine — a pine, Pinus thunbergiana, of Japan, grown as a seaside ornamental in the U.S.
  • matrimony vine — any plant belonging to the genus Lycium, of the nightshade family, species of which are cultivated for their foliage, flowers, and berries.
  • norfolk island pine — a coniferous evergreen tree, Araucaria heterophylla (or A. excelsa), having whorled branches and needlelike foliage, widely cultivated as a houseplant.
  • ponderosa pine — Also called western yellow pine. a large pine, Pinus ponderosa, of western North America, having yellowish-brown bark: the state tree of Montana.
  • western yellow pine — ponderosa pine.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • japanese umbrella pine — a single aberrant species of pine, Sciadopitys verticillata, in which the leaves are fused in pairs and the crown is spire-shaped
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