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Rhymes with darr

D d

One-syllable rhymes

  • snare — one of the strings of gut or of tightly spiraled metal stretched across the skin of a snare drum.
  • spar — (during World War II) a woman enlisted in the women's reserve of the U.S. Coast Guard (disbanded in 1946).
  • spare — to refrain from harming or destroying; leave uninjured; forbear to punish, hurt, or destroy: to spare one's enemy.
  • spohr — Ludwig [loot-vikh,, lood-] /ˈlut vɪx,, ˈlud-/ (Show IPA), or Louis [loo-ee] /ˈlu i/ (Show IPA), 1784–1859, German violinist and composer.
  • square — a rectangle having all four sides of equal length.
  • stair — one of a flight or series of steps for going from one level to another, as in a building.
  • star — any of the heavenly bodies, except the moon, appearing as fixed luminous points in the sky at night.
  • stare — to gaze fixedly and intently, especially with the eyes wide open.
  • starrBelle (Myra Belle Shirley) 1848–89, U.S. outlaw and folk hero.
  • swear — to make a solemn declaration or affirmation by some sacred being or object, as a deity or the Bible.
  • tar — a sailor.
  • tear — the act of tearing.
  • thar — any of several Old World wild goats of the genus Hemitragus, as H. jemlahicus (Himalayan tahr) introduced into New Zealand, having a long mane and short, stout, recurving horns: most are endangered or threatened in their native regions.
  • their — any male person or animal; a man: hes and shes.
  • there — in or at that place (opposed to here): She is there now.
  • they're — They're is the usual spoken form of 'they are'.
  • tsar — an emperor or king.
  • ware — the first season in the year; spring.
  • wear — to carry or have on the body or about the person as a covering, equipment, ornament, or the like: to wear a coat; to wear a saber; to wear a disguise.
  • where — in or at what place?: Where is he? Where do you live?
  • air — Air is the mixture of gases which forms the Earth's atmosphere and which we breathe.
  • ar — Arkansas
  • are — Are is the plural and the second person singular of the present tense of the verb be1. Are is often shortened to -'re after pronouns in spoken English.
  • ayre — air1 (def 8d).
  • baerKarl Ernst von [kahrl urnst von,, fuh n] /kɑrl ɜrnst vɒn,, fən/ (Show IPA), 1792–1876, Estonian zoologist and pioneer embryologist.
  • bahr — Hermann [her-mahn] /ˈhɛr mɑn/ (Show IPA), 1863–1934, Austrian playwright and critic.
  • bar — A bar is a place where you can buy and drink alcoholic drinks.
  • bare — If a part of your body is bare, it is not covered by any clothing.
  • barre — a rail at hip height used for ballet practice and leg exercises
  • bear — If you bear something somewhere, you carry it there or take it there.
  • blair — Tony, full name Anthony Charles Lynton Blair. born 1953, British politician; leader of the Labour Party (1994–2007); prime minister (1997–2007); Middle East peace envoy (2007–2015)
  • blare — If something such as a siren or radio blares or if you blare it, it makes a loud, unpleasant noise.
  • car — a self-propelled road vehicle designed to carry passengers, esp one with four wheels that is powered by an internal-combustion engine
  • care — If you care about something, you feel that it is important and are concerned about it.
  • carr — an area of bog or fen in which scrub, esp willow, has become established
  • chair — A chair is a piece of furniture for one person to sit on. Chairs have a back and four legs.
  • char — If food chars or if you char it, it burns slightly and turns black as it is cooking.
  • cher — a department of central France, in E Centre region. Capital: Bourges. Pop: 312 277 (2003 est). Area: 7304 sq km (2849 sq miles)
  • clair — René (rəne), real name René Chomette. 1898–1981, French film director; noted for his comedies including An Italian Straw Hat (1928) and pioneering sound films such as Sous les toits de Paris (1930); later films include Les Belles de nuit (1952)
  • claire — a feminine name
  • clare — a county of W Republic of Ireland, in Munster between Galway Bay and the Shannon estuary. County town: Ennis. Pop: 103 277 (2002). Area: 3188 sq km (1231 sq miles)
  • csar — Alternative form of tsar.
  • czar — an emperor: title of any of the former emperors of Russia and, at various times, the sovereigns of other Slavic nations
  • dar — Daughters of the American Revolution
  • dare — If you do not dare to do something, you do not have enough courage to do it, or you do not want to do it because you fear the consequences. If you dare to do something, you do something which requires a lot of courage.
  • fair — free from bias, dishonesty, or injustice: a fair decision; a fair judge.
  • far — at or to a great distance; a long way off; at or to a remote point: We sailed far ahead of the fleet.
  • fare — the price of conveyance or passage in a bus, train, airplane, or other vehicle.
  • fer — (dialectical, especially British) eye dialect of for.
  • flair — a natural talent, aptitude, or ability; bent; knack: a flair for rhyming.
  • flare — to burn with an unsteady, swaying flame, as a torch or candle in the wind.
  • frere — brother.
  • freyre — Gilberto [zhil-ber-too] /ʒɪlˈbɛr tʊ/ (Show IPA), 1900–87, Brazilian sociologist and anthropologist.
  • gar — Also called garfish, garpike. any predaceous freshwater fish of the genus Lepisosteus, of North America, covered with hard, diamond-shaped scales and having long jaws with needlelike teeth.
  • gare — low-grade wool fibers from the legs of sheep.
  • glare — a bright, smooth surface, as of ice.
  • haar — a thick, wet fog along the seacoast.
  • hair — any of the numerous fine, usually cylindrical, keratinous filaments growing from the skin of humans and animals; a pilus.
  • hare — any rodentlike mammal of the genus Lepus, of the family Leporidae, having long ears, a divided upper lip, and long hind limbs adapted for leaping.
  • heir — a person who inherits or has a right of inheritance in the property of another following the latter's death.
  • herr — the conventional German title of respect and term of address for a man, corresponding to Mr. or in direct address to sir.
  • jar — Java archive
  • khmer — a member of a people in Cambodia whose ancestors established an empire about the 5th century a.d. and who reached their zenith during the 9th to the 12th centuries when they dominated most of Indochina.
  • lahrBert (Irving Lahrheim) 1895–1967, U.S. entertainer and actor.
  • lair — A wild animal's resting place, especially one that is well hidden.
  • lar — (initial capital letter) Roman Religion. any of the Lares.
  • lehr — an oven used to anneal glass.
  • mair — (Geordie) more.
  • maire — a tall native New Zealand tree, olea cunninghami, with dark brown wood
  • mar — to damage or spoil to a certain extent; render less perfect, attractive, useful, etc.; impair or spoil: That billboard mars the view. The holiday was marred by bad weather.
  • mare — Walter (John) 1873–1956, English poet, novelist, playwright, and short-story writer.
  • mcnairLesley James, 1883–1944, U.S. army officer.
  • nair — a group of Hindu castes in the Kerala region of India.
  • npr — National Public Radio
  • our — (used to denote the narrator of a literary work written in the first person singular).
  • pair — two identical, similar, or corresponding things that are matched for use together: a pair of gloves; a pair of earrings.
  • par — an equality in value or standing; a level of equality: The gains and the losses are on a par.
  • pare — Ambroise [ahn-brwaz] /ɑ̃ˈbrwaz/ (Show IPA), 1510–90, French surgeon.
  • parr — a young salmon, having dark crossbars on its sides.
  • pear — the edible fruit, typically rounded but elongated and growing smaller toward the stem, of a tree, Pyrus communis, of the rose family.
  • pharr — a city in S Texas.
  • pierre — a state in the N central United States: a part of the Midwest. 77,047 sq. mi. (199,550 sq. km). Capital: Pierre. Abbreviation: SD (for use with zip code), S. Dak.
  • r — the 18th letter of the English alphabet, a consonant.
  • r. — rabbi.
  • rare — Réseaux Associés pour la Recherche Européenne
  • saar — Also called Saar Basin. a coal-producing region in W Germany, in the Saar River valley: governed by the League of Nations 1919–35; returned to Germany 1935 as a result of a plebiscite; under French economic control following World War II until 1956.
  • sar — Special Administrative Region (of China)
  • scar — a precipitous, rocky place; cliff.
  • scare — to fill, especially suddenly, with fear or terror; frighten; alarm.
  • share — a plowshare.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • adar — (in the Jewish calendar) the twelfth month of the year according to biblical reckoning and the sixth month of the civil year, usually falling within February and March. In a leap year, an additional month Adar Rishon (first Adar) is intercalated between Shevat and Adar, and the latter is known as Adar Sheni (second Adar)
  • afar — Afar means a long way away.
  • affair — If an event or a series of events has been mentioned and you want to talk about it again, you can refer to it as the affair.
  • ajar — If a door is ajar, it is slightly open.
  • algar — a male given name.
  • altair — the brightest star in the constellation Aquila. Visual magnitude: 0.77; spectral type: A7V; distance: 16.8 light years
  • ant bear — a large, ant-eating, edentate mammal (Myrmecophaga tridactyla) of Central America and tropical South America, with a long, shaggy tail; giant anteater
  • astaire — Fred, real name Frederick Austerlitz. 1899–1987, US dancer, singer, and actor, whose films include Top Hat (1935), Swing Time (1936), and The Band Wagon (1953)
  • au pair — An au pair is a young person from a foreign country who lives with a family in order to learn the language and who helps to look after the children.
  • aware — If you are aware of something, you know about it.
  • babar — Babur
  • bath chair — a wheelchair for invalids, often with a hood
  • bazaar — In areas such as the Middle East and India, a bazaar is a place where there are many small shops and stalls.
  • bazar — a marketplace or shopping quarter, especially one in the Middle East.
  • beware — If you tell someone to beware of a person or thing, you are warning them that the person or thing may harm them or be dangerous.
  • bizarre — Something that is bizarre is very odd and strange.
  • black bear — the common North American bear (Ursus americanus) that lives in forests and feeds mainly on roots and berries
  • boyar — a member of an old order of Russian nobility, ranking immediately below the princes: abolished by Peter the Great
  • brittle star — any echinoderm of the class Ophiuroidea, having the body composed of a central, rounded disk from which radiate long, slender, fragile arms.
  • bronze star — a U.S. military decoration awarded for heroism or achievement in military operations other than those involving aerial flights.
  • brown bear — a large ferocious brownish bear, Ursus arctos, inhabiting temperate forests of North America, Europe, and Asia
  • by far — You use the expression by far when you are comparing something or someone with others of the same kind, in order to emphasize how great the difference is between them. For example, you can say that something is by far the best or the best by far to indicate that it is definitely the best.
  • cable car — A cable car is a vehicle for taking people up mountains or steep hills. It is pulled by a moving cable.
  • camp chair — a lightweight folding chair
  • cash bar — A cash bar is a bar at a party or similar event where guests can buy drinks.
  • cattle car — Railroads. stock car (def 2).
  • chair car — a railroad passenger car with pairs of adjustable seats on both sides of the aisle
  • cigar — Cigars are rolls of dried tobacco leaves which people smoke.
  • coal car — a railroad car designed for transporting coal
  • coal tar — Coal tar is a thick black liquid made from coal which is used for making drugs and chemical products.
  • compare — When you compare things, you consider them and discover the differences or similarities between them.
  • cross hair — Also called cross wire. one of the fine wires or fibers, strands of spider web, or the like, crossing in a focal plane of an optical instrument to center a target or object or to define a line of sight.
  • dakar — the capital and chief port of Senegal, on the SE side of Cape Verde peninsula. Pop: 2 313 000 (2005 est)
  • death chair — electric chair.
  • deck chair — A deck chair is a simple chair with a folding frame, and a piece of canvas as the seat and back. Deck chairs are usually used on the beach, on a ship, or in the yard.
  • declare — If you declare that something is true, you say that it is true in a firm, deliberate way. You can also declare an attitude or intention.
  • despair — Despair is the feeling that everything is wrong and that nothing will improve.
  • dinar — any of various former coins of the Near East, especially gold coins issued by Islamic governments.
  • disbar — to expel from the legal profession or from the bar of a particular court.
  • dog star — the bright star Sirius, in Canis Major.
  • double bar — a double vertical line on a staff indicating the conclusion of a piece of music or a subdivision of it.
  • double star — two stars that appear as one if not viewed through a telescope with adequate magnification, such as two stars that are separated by a great distance but are nearly in line with each other and an observer (optical double star) or those that are relatively close together and comprise a single physical system (physical double star)
  • farrarGeraldine (Mrs. Lou Tellegen) 1882–1967, U.S. operatic soprano.
  • ferrar — Nicholas. 1592–1637, English mystic. He founded (1625) an Anglican religious community at Little Gidding, Huntingdonshire
  • film star — A film star is a famous actor or actress who appears in films.
  • fixed star — any of the stars which apparently always retain the same position in respect to one another.
  • flare star — a dwarf star that exhibits sudden increases of magnitude similar to solar flares.
  • forswear — to reject or renounce under oath: to forswear an injurious habit.
  • foursquare — consisting of four corners and four right angles; square: a solid, foursquare building.
  • freight car — any car for carrying freight.
  • giant star — a star having a diameter of from 10 to 100 times that of the sun, as Arcturus or Aldebaran.
  • gill bar — branchial arch (def 1).
  • go far — at or to a great distance; a long way off; at or to a remote point: We sailed far ahead of the fleet.
  • grab bar — a bar attached to a wall near a bathtub or shower to provide a handgrip for a person who is bathing.
  • great bear — the constellation Ursa Major.
  • guard hair — the long, usually stiff outer hair protecting the underfur in certain animals.
  • guitar — a stringed musical instrument with a long, fretted neck, a flat, somewhat violinlike body, and typically six strings, which are plucked with the fingers or with a plectrum.
  • health care — the field concerned with the maintenance or restoration of the health of the body or mind.
  • high bar — a bar fixed in a position parallel to the floor or ground, for use in chinning and other exercises.
  • hot air — empty, exaggerated, or pretentious talk or writing: His report on the company's progress was just so much hot air.
  • impair — to make or cause to become worse; diminish in ability, value, excellence, etc.; weaken or damage: to impair one's health; to impair negotiations.
  • kadar — János [yah-nawsh] /ˈyɑ nɔʃ/ (Show IPA), 1912–89, Hungarian political leader: general secretary of the Communist Party 1956–88.
  • lamarJoseph R. 1857–1916, U.S. jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1911–16.
  • lawn chair — a chair or chaise longue designed for use out of doors.
  • light air — a wind of 1–3 miles per hour (0.5–1.3 m/sec).
  • little bear — the constellation Ursa Minor.
  • lounge chair — a chair designed for lounging, as an easy chair, chaise longue, or recliner.
  • mail car — a railroad car for carrying mail.
  • midair — any point in the air not contiguous with the earth or other solid surface: to catch a ball in midair.
  • milk bar — a simple restaurant, often with an open front, or a counter or booth where milk drinks, sandwiches, etc., are sold.
  • moliere — (Jean Baptiste Poquelin) 1622–73, French actor and playwright.
  • montclair — a city in NE New Jersey.
  • myanmarUnion of, official name of Burma.
  • navar — a system of air navigation in which a ground radar station relays signals to each aircraft indicating the relative positions of neighbouring aircraft
  • navarre — a former kingdom in SW France and N Spain.
  • ne'er — never.
  • north star — Polaris.
  • o'hare — an airport in Chicago.
  • pace car — (in auto racing) an automobile that leads the competing cars through a pace lap or laps and leaves the course before the actual start of the race.
  • pinch bar — a kind of crowbar or lever with a projection that serves as a fulcrum.
  • pine tar — a very viscid, blackish-brown liquid having an odor resembling that of turpentine, obtained by the destructive distillation of pine wood, used in paints, roofing, soaps, and, medicinally, for skin infections.
  • prayer — a person who prays.
  • prepare — to put in proper condition or readiness: to prepare a patient for surgery.
  • prowl car — squad car.
  • qatar — an independent emirate on the Persian Gulf; under British protection until 1971. 8500 sq. mi. (22,000 sq. km). Capital: Doha.
  • renoirJean [zhahn] /ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1894–1979, French film director and writer.
  • repair — to restore to a good or sound condition after decay or damage; mend: to repair a motor.
  • rock star — a rock-'n'-roll star or celebrity.
  • root hair — an elongated tubular extension of an epidermal cell of a root, serving to absorb water and minerals from the soil.
  • sand bar — a bar of sand formed in a river or sea by the action of tides or currents.
  • scout car — a fast, lightly-armored military vehicle equipped with guns and used chiefly for reconnaissance.
  • sea hare — any gastropod of the order Aplysiacea, comprising large marine sluglike mollusks with a reduced, internal shell.
  • sea star — starfish.
  • set square — a thin flat piece of plastic, metal, etc, in the shape of a right-angled triangle, used in technical drawing
  • side chair — a straight-backed chair without arms.
  • sinclairHarry Ford, 1876–1956, U.S. oil businessman: a major figure in the Teapot Dome scandal.
  • sitar — a lute of India with a small, pear-shaped body and a long, broad, fretted neck.
  • skin care — the cleansing, massaging, moisturizing, etc., of the skin, especially the face or hands.
  • slice bar — a long-handled instrument with a blade at the end, for clearing away or breaking up clinkers, coal, etc., in a furnace.
  • slop jar — a large jar or pail for collecting household slop for disposal.
  • sloth bear — a coarse-haired, long-snouted bear, Ursus ursinus, of India and Indochina: now rare.
  • snack bar — a lunchroom or restaurant where light meals are sold.
  • so far — at or to a great distance; a long way off; at or to a remote point: We sailed far ahead of the fleet.
  • space bar — a horizontal bar on a typewriter keyboard that is depressed in order to resume typing one space to the right.
  • sport car — a small, high-powered automobile with long, low lines, usually seating two persons.
  • stock car — a standard model of automobile changed in various ways for racing purposes.
  • straight chair — a chair with a straight back, especially one that is unupholstered and has straight legs and straight arms or no arms.
  • subpar — below an average, usual, or normal level, quality, or the like; below par: This month his performance has been subpar.
  • take care — a state of mind in which one is troubled; worry, anxiety, or concern: He was never free from care.
  • tank car — Railroads. a car containing one or more tanks for the transportation of liquids, gases, or granular solids.
  • thus far — at or to a great distance; a long way off; at or to a remote point: We sailed far ahead of the fleet.
  • times square — a wide intersection extending from 43rd to 47th Streets in central Manhattan, New York City, where Broadway and Seventh Avenue intersect.
  • try square — a device for testing the squareness of carpentry work or the like, or for laying out right angles, consisting of a pair of straightedges fixed at right angles to one another.
  • unfair — not fair; not conforming to approved standards, as of justice, honesty, or ethics: an unfair law; an unfair wage policy.
  • victoire — a female given name, French form of Victoria.
  • voltaire — (François Marie Arouet) 1694–1778, French philosopher, historian, satirist, dramatist, and essayist.
  • wet bar — a small bar equipped with a sink and running water, for making and serving cocktails at home, in a hotel suite, or the like.
  • wing chair — a large upholstered chair having a back with wings.
  • wood tar — a dark viscid product obtained from wood by distillation or by slow burning without flame, used in its natural state to preserve timber, rope, etc., or subjected to further distillation to yield creosote, oils, and a final residuum, wood pitch.
  • word square — a set of words such that when arranged one beneath another in the form of a square they read alike horizontally and vertically.
  • yacht chair — a folding armchair consisting of a wooden frame across which are stretched strips of canvas to form the seat and back.
  • zadar — a seaport in W Croatia, on the Adriatic: formerly, with surrounding territory, an exclave of Italy.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • arctic char — a char, Salvelinus alpinus, that occurs in northern and arctic seas
  • arctic hare — a large hare, Lepus arcticus, of the Canadian Arctic whose fur is white in winter
  • au revoir — goodbye
  • baggage car — A baggage car is a railway carriage, often without windows, which is used to carry luggage, goods, or mail.
  • balsam pear — an Old World tropical vine, Momordica charantia, of the gourd family, having yellow flowers and orange-yellow fruit.
  • barber chair — a chair used by barbers, adjustable in height and having an adjustable headrest, back, and footrest.
  • basket star — any echinoderm of the class Ophiuroidea, especially of the genus Gorgonocephalus, having long, slender, branching arms.
  • belgian hare — a large red breed of domestic rabbit
  • bevel square — a woodworker's square with an adjustable arm that can be set to mark out an angle or to check the slope of a surface
  • bill of fare — The bill of fare at a restaurant is a list of the food for a meal from which you may choose what you want to eat.
  • blazing star — a North American liliaceous plant, Chamaelirium luteum, with a long spike of small white flowers
  • bring to bear — to bring into operation or effect
  • buffet car — a railway coach where light refreshments are served
  • bumper car — A bumper car is a small electric car with a wide rubber bumper all round. People drive bumper cars around a special enclosure at a fairground.
  • camel's hair — the hair of the camel
  • captain's chair — a hardwood armchair having a low, curved back, formed of a single rail supported by spindles, and a saddle seat
  • coffee bar — A coffee bar is a small café where non-alcoholic drinks and snacks are sold.
  • color bar — color line
  • compressed air — air at a higher pressure than atmospheric pressure: used esp as a source of power for machines
  • cookie jar — a jar or other container for storing cookies.
  • cote d'ivoire — a republic in West Africa, on the Gulf of Guinea: Portuguese trading for ivory and slaves began in the 16th century; made a French protectorate in 1842 and became independent in 1960; major producer of coffee and cocoa. Official language: French. Religion: Muslim majority, with animist, atheist, and Roman Catholic minorities. Currency: franc. Capital: Yamoussoukro (administrative); Abidjan (legislative). Pop: 22 400 835 (2013 est). Area: 319 820 sq km (123 483 sq miles)
  • croix de guerre — a French military decoration awarded for gallantry in battle: established 1915
  • debonair — A man who is debonair is confident, charming, and well-dressed.
  • dining car — a railroad car equipped with tables and chairs, in which meals are served.
  • disrepair — the condition of needing repair; an impaired or neglected state.
  • doctrinaire — a person who tries to apply some doctrine or theory without sufficient regard for practical considerations; an impractical theorist.
  • easy chair — an upholstered armchair for lounging.
  • feather star — a free-swimming crinoid.
  • flying mare — Wrestling. a method of attack in which a wrestler grasps the wrist of the opponent, turns in the opposite direction, and throws the opponent over the shoulder and down.
  • folding chair — a chair that can be collapsed flat for easy storage or transport.
  • grizzly bear — a large North American brown bear, Ursus (arctos) horribilis, with coarse, gray-tipped brown fur, once widespread in the western part of the continent as far south as northern Mexico but now restricted to some regions of Alaska, western Canada, and the U.S. Rocky Mountains: a threatened species except in Alaska.
  • heavy spar — barite.
  • honey bear — a kinkajou.
  • in the air — a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and minute amounts of other gases that surrounds the earth and forms its atmosphere.
  • kodiak bear — a large, brown bear, Ursus (arctos) middendorffi, inhabiting coastal areas of Alaska and British Columbia, that grows to a length of 9 feet (2.7 meters).
  • latin square — a square array of numbers, letters, etc., in which each item appears exactly once in each row and column: used in statistical analysis.
  • leyden jar — a device for storing electric charge, consisting essentially of a glass jar lined inside and outside, for about two-thirds of its height, with tinfoil.
  • liquid air — a pale blue, intensely cold liquid, obtained by the compression and cooling of air: used as a source of oxygen, nitrogen, and inert gases, and as a refrigerant.
  • lord's prayerthe, the prayer given by Jesus to His disciples, and beginning with the words Our Father. Matt. 6:9–13; Luke 11:2–4.
  • love affair — a romantic relationship or episode between lovers; an amour.
  • magic square — a square containing integers arranged in an equal number of rows and columns so that the sum of the integers in any row, column, or diagonal is the same.
  • mal de mer — seasickness.
  • mason jar — a glass jar with a wide mouth and an airtight screw top, much used in home canning.
  • millionaire — a person whose wealth amounts to a million or more in some unit of currency, as dollars.
  • morning star — a bright planet, especially Venus, seen in the east immediately before sunrise.
  • morris chair — a large armchair having an adjustable back and loose, removable cushions.
  • multiple star — three or more stars lying close together in the celestial sphere and usually united in a single gravitational system.
  • neutron star — an extremely dense, compact star composed primarily of neutrons, especially the collapsed core of a supernova.
  • nom de guerre — an assumed name, as one under which a person fights, paints, writes, etc.; pseudonym.
  • parlor car — a railroad passenger car that has individual reserved seats and is more comfortable than a day coach.
  • patrol car — squad car.
  • polar bear — a large white bear, Ursus maritimus, of the arctic regions.
  • polar star — north star
  • police car — squad car.
  • prickly pear — any of numerous cacti of the genus Opuntia, having flattened, usually spiny stem joints, yellow, orange, or reddish flowers, and ovoid, often edible fruit.
  • questionnaire — a list of questions, usually printed, submitted for replies that can be analyzed for usable information: a questionnaire used in market research.
  • racing car — a car used for racing, as a specially designed and modified car or stock car.
  • rocking chair — a chair mounted on rockers or springs so as to permit a person to rock back and forth while sitting.
  • salad bar — an assortment of salad ingredients, condiments, and dressings displayed on a serving table or counter, as at a restaurant, so that one can choose and combine ingredients freely.
  • sedan chair — an enclosed vehicle for one person, borne on poles by two bearers and common during the 17th and 18th centuries.
  • serpent star — brittle star.
  • shooting star — meteor (def 1b).
  • silver star — a bronze star with a small silver star at the center, awarded to a soldier who has been cited in orders for gallantry in action, when the citation does not warrant the award of a Medal of Honor or the Distinguished Service Cross.
  • sleeping car — a railroad car fitted with berths, compartments, bedrooms, or drawing rooms for passengers to sleep in.
  • smoking car — smoker (def 2a).
  • snowshoe hare — a large-footed North American hare, Lepus americanus, that is white in winter and dark brown in summer.
  • solar flare — flare (def 22).
  • solitaire — Also called patience. any of various games played by one person with one or more regular 52-card packs, part or all of which are usually dealt out according to a given pattern, the object being to arrange the cards in a predetermined manner.
  • steel guitar — an acoustic, handheld guitar having a metal resonator and producing a wailing, variable sound.
  • stinging hair — sting (def 18).
  • superstar — a person, as a performer or athlete, who enjoys wide recognition, is esteemed for exceptional talent, and is eagerly sought after for his or her services.
  • swivel chair — a chair whose seat turns around horizontally on a swivel.
  • teddy bear — a toy bear, especially a stuffed one.
  • touring car — an open automobile designed for five or more passengers.
  • trolley car — a streetcar propelled electrically by current taken by means of a trolley from a conducting wire strung overhead or running beneath a slot between the tracks.
  • unaware — not aware or conscious; unconscious: to be unaware of any change.
  • variable star — a star that varies markedly in brightness from time to time.
  • walk on air — a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and minute amounts of other gases that surrounds the earth and forms its atmosphere.
  • wear and tear — damage or deterioration resulting from ordinary use; normal depreciation.
  • windsor chair — a wooden chair of many varieties, having a spindle back and legs slanting outward: common in 18th-century England and in the American colonies.
  • woolly bear — the caterpillar of any of several moths, as a tiger moth, having a dense coat of woolly hairs.
  • wrecking bar — pinch bar.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • almodóvar — Pedro. born 1949, Spanish film director. His provocative black comedies include Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (1988), The Flower of My Secret (1995), Talk to Her (2002), Volver (2006), and The Skin I Live In (2011)
  • anchovy pear — a Jamaican tree, Grias cauliflora, bearing edible fruits that taste like the mango: family Lecythidaceae
  • billionaire — A billionaire is an extremely rich person who has money or property worth at least a thousand million pounds or dollars.
  • binary star — a double star system comprising two stars orbiting around their common centre of mass. A visual binary can be seen through a telescope. A spectroscopic binary can only be observed by the spectroscopic Doppler shift as each star moves towards or away from the earth
  • cinnamon bear — a reddish-brown variety of the American black bear
  • hawaiian guitar — a six-to-eight-string electric guitar, fretted with a piece of metal or bone to produce a whining, glissando sound, played in a horizontal position usually resting on the performer's knees or on a stand, and much used by country music performers.
  • house of prayer — house of God.
  • iceland spar — a transparent variety of calcite that is double-refracting and is used as a polarizer.
  • mineral tar — bitumen of the consistency of tar; maltha.
  • morning prayer — matin (def 1c).
  • out of thin air — suddenly and unexpectedly
  • up in the air — a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and minute amounts of other gases that surrounds the earth and forms its atmosphere.
  • vanity fair — (in Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress) a fair that goes on perpetually in the town of Vanity and symbolizes worldly ostentation and frivolity.
  • varying hare — snowshoe hare.
  • vina del mar — a city in central Chile, near Valparaiso: seaside resort.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • acoustic guitar — an ordinary guitar, which produces its normal sound through the sounding board and is not amplified in any way
  • alligator pear — avocado
  • concessionaire — A concessionaire is a person or company that has the right to sell a product or to run a business, especially in a building belonging to another business.
  • tender loving care — considerate and kindly care, as of someone who is ill, upset, etc

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • book of common prayer — the official book of church services of the Church of England, until 1980, when the Alternative Service Book was sanctioned
  • multimillionaire — a person who possesses a fortune that amounts to many millions of dollars, francs, etc.
  • refrigerator car — a freight car having either an ice chest or machinery for chilling perishables and sometimes having a heating unit to keep perishables from freezing.
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