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Rhymes with fairest

fair
F f

Two-syllable rhymes

  • merit — claim to respect and praise; excellence; worth.
  • parent — a father or a mother.
  • paris — Anatole [a-na-tawl] /a naˈtɔl/ (Show IPA), (Jacques Anatole Thibault) 1844–1924, French novelist and essayist: Nobel Prize 1921.
  • perish — to die or be destroyed through violence, privation, etc.: to perish in an earthquake.
  • purest — free from anything of a different, inferior, or contaminating kind; free from extraneous matter: pure gold; pure water.
  • purist — strict observance of or insistence on purity in language, style, etc.
  • rarest — (of meat) cooked just slightly: He likes his steak rare.
  • terrace — a raised level with a vertical or sloping front or sides faced with masonry, turf, or the like, especially one of a series of levels rising one above another.
  • tourist — a person who is traveling, especially for pleasure.
  • wedding — the act or ceremony of marrying; marriage; nuptials.
  • airless — If a place is airless, there is no fresh air in it.
  • barest — without covering or clothing; naked; nude: bare legs.
  • careless — If you are careless, you do not pay enough attention to what you are doing, and so you make mistakes, or cause harm or damage.
  • cherish — If you cherish something such as a hope or a pleasant memory, you keep it in your mind for a long period of time.
  • cherished — clung to, esp when fulfilment is unlikely
  • clearest — free from darkness, obscurity, or cloudiness; light: a clear day.
  • czarist — a variant spelling (esp US) of tsarist
  • dearest — You can call someone dearest when you are very fond of them.
  • fairy — (in folklore) one of a class of supernatural beings, generally conceived as having a diminutive human form and possessing magical powers with which they intervene in human affairs.
  • florist — a retailer of flowers, ornamental plants, etc.
  • forestLee, 1873–1961, U.S. inventor of radio, telegraphic, and telephonic equipment.
  • garish — crudely or tastelessly colorful, showy, or elaborate, as clothes or decoration.
  • greatest — unusually or comparatively large in size or dimensions: A great fire destroyed nearly half the city.
  • harrisBenjamin, c1660–c1720, English journalist who published the first newspaper in America 1690.
  • heiress — a woman who inherits or has a right of inheritance, especially a woman who has inherited or will inherit considerable wealth.
  • jurist — a person versed in the law, as a judge, lawyer, or scholar.
  • lyrist — a person who plays the lyre or who sings and accompanies himself or herself on the lyre.
  • marriage — (broadly) any of the diverse forms of interpersonal union established in various parts of the world to form a familial bond that is recognized legally, religiously, or socially, granting the participating partners mutual conjugal rights and responsibilities and including, for example, opposite-sex marriage, same-sex marriage, plural marriage, and arranged marriage: Anthropologists say that some type of marriage has been found in every known human society since ancient times. See Word Story at the current entry.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • careerist — Careerist people are ambitious and think that their career is more important than anything else.
  • embarrassed — Feeling or showing embarrassment.
  • guitarist — a performer on the guitar.
  • malnourished — poorly or improperly nourished; suffering from malnutrition: thin, malnourished victims of the famine.
  • prettiest — pleasing or attractive to the eye, as by delicacy or gracefulness: a pretty face.
  • scariest — causing fright or alarm.
  • terrorist — a person, usually a member of a group, who uses or advocates terrorism.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • undernourished — not nourished with sufficient or proper food to maintain or promote health or normal growth.

One-syllable rhymes

  • best — Best is the superlative of good.
  • lest — With the intention of preventing (something undesirable); to avoid the risk of.
  • mist — a cloudlike aggregation of minute globules of water suspended in the atmosphere at or near the earth's surface, reducing visibility to a lesser degree than fog.
  • pest — a city in and the capital of Hungary, in the central part, on the Danube River: formed 1873 from two cities on the W bank of the Danube (Buda and Obuda) and one on the E bank (Pest)
  • rest — a support for a lance; lance rest.
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