Rhymes with duck
duck
D d Two-syllable rhymes
- canuck — a Canadian
- dump truck — a usually open-topped truck having a body that can be tilted to discharge its contents, as sand or gravel, through an open tailgate.
- fire truck — fire engine.
- good luck — good fortune
- hand truck — truck1 (def 3).
- sound truck — a truck carrying a loudspeaker from which speeches, music, etc., are broadcast, as for advertising, campaigning, or the like.
- unstuck — freed or loosened from being fastened or stuck: When firmly pushed, the door became unstuck.
- amok — a state of murderous frenzy, originally observed among Malays
- amuck — amok
- bad luck — You can say 'Bad luck', or 'Hard luck', to someone when you want to express sympathy to them.
Three-syllable rhymes
- chuck-a-luck — a gambling game in which players bet on the way three dice, contained in an hourglass-shaped cage, will fall when the cage is pivoted
- garbage truck — lorry that collects refuse
- ladder truck — hook and ladder.
- panel truck — a small truck having a fully enclosed body, used mainly to deliver light or small objects.
- trailer truck — a trailer designed to be drawn by a truck tractor or other motor truck.
One-syllable rhymes
- buck — A buck is a US or Australian dollar.
- chuck — When you chuck something somewhere, you throw it there in a casual or careless way.
- cluck — When a hen clucks, it makes short, low noises.
- duc — duke.
- fuck — to have sexual intercourse with.
- gluck — Alma (Reba Fiersohn; Mme. Efrem Zimbalist) 1884–1938, U.S. operatic soprano, born in Romania.
- guck — slime or oozy dirt: the guck in a stagnant pond.
- huck — toweling of linen or cotton, of a distinctive absorbent weave.
- kluck — Alexander von [ah-le-ksahn-duh r fuh n] /ˌɑ lɛˈksɑn dər fən/ (Show IPA), 1846–1934, German general.
- luck — Polish name of Lutsk.
- muck — moist farmyard dung, decaying vegetable matter, etc.; manure.
- pluck — to pull off or out from the place of growth, as fruit, flowers, feathers, etc.: to pluck feathers from a chicken.
- puck — Also called Hobgoblin, Robin Goodfellow. a particularly mischievous sprite in English folklore who appears as a character in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
- ruck — a fold or wrinkle; crease.
- schmuck — an obnoxious or contemptible person.
- shuck — a husk or pod, as the outer covering of corn, hickory nuts, chestnuts, etc.
- snuck — to go in a stealthy or furtive manner; slink; skulk.
- struck — simple past tense and a past participle of strike.
- stuck — simple past tense and past participle of stick2 .
- suck — to draw into the mouth by producing a partial vacuum by action of the lips and tongue: to suck lemonade through a straw.
- suk — Josef [yaw-zef] /ˈyɔ zɛf/ (Show IPA), 1874–1935, Czech composer and violinist.
- truck — a shuffling jitterbug step.
- tuck — to put into a small, close, or concealing place: Tuck the money into your wallet.
- yuck — a loud, hearty laugh.
- yuk — a loud, hearty laugh.