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Rhymes with embellishment

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Three-syllable rhymes

  • reticent — disposed to be silent or not to speak freely; reserved.
  • celibate — Someone who is celibate does not marry or have sex, because of their religious beliefs.
  • elegant — Pleasingly graceful and stylish in appearance or manner.
  • eloquent — Fluent or persuasive in speaking or writing.
  • embellish — Make (something) more attractive by the addition of decorative details or features.
  • embellished — Simple past tense and past participle of embellish.
  • fetishist — belief in or use of fetishes.
  • hesitant — hesitating; undecided, doubtful, or disinclined.
  • negligent — guilty of or characterized by neglect, as of duty: negligent officials.
  • precedent — Law. a legal decision or form of proceeding serving as an authoritative rule or pattern in future similar or analogous cases.
  • predicate — to proclaim; declare; affirm; assert.
  • president — (often initial capital letter) the highest executive officer of a modern republic, as the Chief Executive of the United States.
  • relevance — the condition of being relevant, or connected with the matter at hand: Some traditional institutions of the media lack relevance in this digital age.
  • relevant — bearing upon or connected with the matter in hand; pertinent: a relevant remark.
  • relishing — liking or enjoyment of the taste of something.
  • resident — a person who resides in a place.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • development — Development is the gradual growth or formation of something.
  • effeminate — (of a man or boy) having traits, tastes, habits, etc., traditionally considered feminine, as softness or delicacy.
  • embellishing — Present participle of embellish.
  • indelicate — offensive to a sense of generally accepted propriety, modesty, or decency; improper, unrefined, or coarse: indelicate language.
  • intelligence — capacity for learning, reasoning, understanding, and similar forms of mental activity; aptitude in grasping truths, relationships, facts, meanings, etc.
  • intelligent — having good understanding or a high mental capacity; quick to comprehend, as persons or animals: an intelligent student.
  • irrelevant — not relevant; not applicable or pertinent: His lectures often stray to interesting but irrelevant subjects.
  • replenishment — to make full or complete again, as by supplying what is lacking, used up, etc.: to replenish one's stock of food.
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