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Rhymes with employed

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One-syllable rhymes

  • boy — A boy is a child who will grow up to be a man.
  • boyd — Arthur. 1920–99, Australian painter and sculptor, noted for his large ceramic sculptures and his series of engravings
  • choice — If there is a choice of things, there are several of them and you can choose the one you want.
  • coin — A coin is a small piece of metal which is used as money.
  • fired — a state, process, or instance of combustion in which fuel or other material is ignited and combined with oxygen, giving off light, heat, and flame.
  • floyd — Carlisle (Sessions, Jr.) born 1926, U.S. composer, especially of operas.
  • freudAnna, 1895–1982, British psychoanalyst, born in Austria (daughter of Sigmund Freud).
  • joy — a female given name.
  • lloyd — an association of independent English insurance underwriters, founded in London about 1688, originally engaged in underwriting only marine risks but now also issuing policies on almost every type of insurance.
  • noise — sound, especially of a loud, harsh, or confused kind: deafening noises.
  • paid — a simple past tense and past participle of pay1 .
  • ploy — a maneuver or stratagem, as in conversation, to gain the advantage.
  • poise — a centimeter-gram-second unit of viscosity, equal to the viscosity of a fluid in which a stress of one dyne per square centimeter is required to maintain a difference of velocity of one centimeter per second between two parallel planes in the fluid that lie in the direction of flow and are separated by a distance of one centimeter. Symbol: P.
  • toy — an object, often a small representation of something familiar, as an animal or person, for children or others to play with; plaything.
  • tried — simple past tense and past participle of try.
  • voice — the sound or sounds uttered through the mouth of living creatures, especially of human beings in speaking, shouting, singing, etc.
  • void — Law. having no legal force or effect; not legally binding or enforceable.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • annoy — If someone or something annoys you, it makes you fairly angry and impatient.
  • annoyed — If you are annoyed, you are fairly angry about something.
  • applied — An applied subject of study has a practical use, rather than being concerned only with theory.
  • avoid — If you avoid something unpleasant that might happen, you take action in order to prevent it from happening.
  • betrayed — to deliver or expose to an enemy by treachery or disloyalty: Benedict Arnold betrayed his country.
  • buoyed — Nautical. a distinctively shaped and marked float, sometimes carrying a signal or signals, anchored to mark a channel, anchorage, navigational hazard, etc., or to provide a mooring place away from the shore.
  • deploy — To deploy troops or military resources means to organize or position them so that they are ready to be used.
  • deployed — Simple past tense and past participle of deploy.
  • destroy — To destroy something means to cause so much damage to it that it is completely ruined or does not exist any more.
  • destroyed — to reduce (an object) to useless fragments, a useless form, or remains, as by rending, burning, or dissolving; injure beyond repair or renewal; demolish; ruin; annihilate.
  • detroit — a city in SE Michigan, on the Detroit River: a major Great Lakes port; once the largest car-manufacturing centre in the world. Pop: 911 402 (2003 est)
  • devoid — destitute or void (of); free (from)
  • employ — Give work to (someone) and pay them for it.
  • implode — to burst inward (opposed to explode).
  • outside — the outer side, surface, or part; exterior: The outside of the house needs painting.
  • steroid — any of a large group of fat-soluble organic compounds, as the sterols, bile acids, and sex hormones, most of which have specific physiological action.
  • toyed — an object, often a small representation of something familiar, as an animal or person, for children or others to play with; plaything.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • overjoyed — to cause to feel great joy or delight; elate: It overjoys me to hear of your good fortune. I was overjoyed at her safe arrival.
  • sigmund freudAnna, 1895–1982, British psychoanalyst, born in Austria (daughter of Sigmund Freud).
  • unemployed — not employed; without a job; out of work: an unemployed secretary.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • underemployed — employed at a job that does not fully use one's skills or abilities.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • anabolic steroid — Anabolic steroids are drugs which people, especially athletes, take to make their muscles bigger and to give them more strength.
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