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Rhymes with falconet

fal·co·net
F f

One-syllable rhymes

  • bet — If you bet on the result of a horse race, football game, or other event, you give someone a sum of money which they give you back with extra money if the result is what you predicted, or which they keep if it is not.
  • brett — a male or female given name.
  • chet — a male given name, form of Chester.
  • debt — A debt is a sum of money that you owe someone.
  • et — (obsolete) and.
  • fret — to feel or express worry, annoyance, discontent, or the like: Fretting about the lost ring isn't going to help.
  • get — to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension.
  • jet — a compact black coal, susceptible of a high polish, used for making beads, jewelry, buttons, etc.
  • jfet — Junction Field Effect Transistor
  • let — Archaic. to hinder, prevent, or obstruct.
  • lett — a member of a people, the chief inhabitants of Latvia, living on or near the eastern coast of the Baltic Sea; Latvian.
  • met — simple past tense and past participle of meet1 .
  • net — net income, profit, or the like.
  • nett — (dated, especially in the USA) alternative spelling of net (Remaining after expenses or deductions.).
  • pet — a fit of peevishness, sulking, or bad mood.
  • ret — to soak in water or expose to moisture, as flax or hemp, to facilitate the removal of the fiber from the woody tissue by partial rotting.
  • set — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • stet — let it stand (used imperatively as a direction on a printer's proof, manuscript, or the like, to retain material previously cancelled, usually accompanied by a row of dots under or beside the material).
  • sweat — to perspire, especially freely or profusely.
  • tet — the Vietnamese New Year celebration, occurring during the first seven days of the first month of the lunar calendar.
  • tete — a city in W Mozambique, on the Zambezi River.
  • threat — a declaration of an intention or determination to inflict punishment, injury, etc., in retaliation for, or conditionally upon, some action or course; menace: He confessed under the threat of imprisonment.
  • vet — veterinarian.
  • wet — moistened, covered, or soaked with water or some other liquid: wet hands.
  • whet — to sharpen (a knife, tool, etc.) by grinding or friction.
  • yet — at the present time; now: Don't go yet. Are they here yet?
  • yett — gate.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • abet — If one person abets another, they help or encourage them to do something criminal or wrong. Abet is often used in the legal expression 'aid and abet'.
  • annette — a feminine name
  • as yet — You use as yet with negative statements to describe a situation that has existed up until the present time.
  • babette — a female given name, form of Barbara.
  • baguette — A baguette is a type of long, thin, white bread which is traditionally made in France.
  • barbette — (formerly) an earthen platform inside a parapet, from which heavy guns could fire over the top
  • barnett — a male given name.
  • barrette — A barrette is a small metal or plastic device that a woman uses to hold her hair in position.
  • beget — To beget something means to cause it to happen or be created.
  • beset — If someone or something is beset by problems or fears, they have many problems or fears which affect them severely.
  • bizet — Georges (ʒɔrʒ). 1838–75, French composer, whose works include the opera Carmen (1875) and incidental music to Daudet's L'Arlésienne (1872)
  • bourget — a suburb of Paris: former airport, landing site for Charles A. Lindbergh, May 1927.
  • brunet — dark brown
  • brunette — A brunette is a white-skinned woman or girl with dark brown hair.
  • burnett — Frances Hodgson (ˈhɒdʒsən). 1849–1924, US novelist, born in England; author of Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886) and The Secret Garden (1911)
  • cadet — A cadet is a young man or woman who is being trained in the armed services or the police.
  • cassette — A cassette is a small, flat, rectangular plastic case containing magnetic tape which is used for recording and playing back sound or film.
  • charette — a final, intensive effort to finish a project, especially an architectural design project, before a deadline.
  • charrette — a final, intensive effort to finish a project, especially an architectural design project, before a deadline.
  • chevrette — the skin of a young goat
  • claudette — a female given name, form of Claudia.
  • cold sweat — If you are in a cold sweat, you are sweating and feel cold, usually because you are very afraid or nervous.
  • colette — full name Sidonie Gabrielle Claudine Colette. 1873–1954, French novelist; her works include Chéri (1920), Gigi (1944), and the series of Claudine books
  • collette — Toni, full name Antonia Collette. born 1972, Australian film actress. Her films include Muriel's Wedding (1994), The Sixth Sense (1999) and Little Miss Sunshine (2006)
  • cornet — A cornet is a musical instrument of the brass family that looks like a small trumpet.
  • corvette — A corvette is a small fast warship that is used to protect other ships from attack.
  • cossette — One of the thin strips into which sugar beets are cut as part of the sugar-making process.
  • couchette — A couchette is a bed on a train or a boat which is folded against the wall or used as a seat during the day.
  • dead set — absolutely
  • diskette — floppy disk.
  • doucet — (obsolete except in dialects) A sweetened dish.
  • drift net — a fishing net supported upright in the water by floats attached along the upper edge and sinkers along the lower, so as to be carried with the current or tide.
  • duet — a musical composition for two voices or instruments.
  • fleurette — a female given name.
  • forget — to cease or fail to remember; be unable to recall: to forget someone's name.
  • frechette — Louis Honoré [French lwee aw-naw-rey] /French lwi ɔ nɔˈreɪ/ (Show IPA), 1839–1908, Canadian poet and journalist.
  • gas jet — gas burner (def 1).
  • gazette — a newspaper (now used chiefly in the names of newspapers): The Phoenix Gazette.
  • gilletteKing Camp, 1855–1932, U.S. businessman: inventor of the safety razor.
  • gill net — a curtainlike net, suspended vertically in the water, with meshes of such a size as to catch by the gills a fish that has thrust its head through.
  • gwinnettButton, 1735?–77, American Revolutionary leader, born in England.
  • jeannette — a city in W Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh.
  • jet set — a fashionable social set composed of wealthy people who travel frequently by jetliner to parties and resorts.
  • lorgnette — a pair of eyeglasses mounted on a handle.
  • lynette — a female given name.
  • marquetteJacques [zhahk] /ʒɑk/ (Show IPA), ("Père Marquette") 1637–75, French Jesuit missionary and explorer in America.
  • minette — a syenitic lamprophyre composed chiefly of orthoclase and biotite.
  • nanette — a female given name, form of Ann.
  • ninette — a female given name.
  • nyet — (slang, Russian) A Russian no; a negative response.
  • octet — a company of eight singers or musicians.
  • odette — a female given name.
  • offset — something that counterbalances, counteracts, or compensates for something else; compensating equivalent.
  • ovett — Steve. born 1955, British middle-distance runner: winner of the 800 metres in the 1980 Olympic Games
  • paulette — a female given name: derived from Paul.
  • piet — Scot. a magpie.
  • pipette — a slender graduated tube used in a laboratory for measuring and transferring quantities of liquids from one container to another.
  • pound net — a trap for catching fish, consisting of a system of nets staked upright in the water and a rectangular enclosure or pound from which escape is impossible.
  • preset — to set beforehand.
  • quartet — any group of four persons or things.
  • quintet — any set or group of five persons or things.
  • regret — to feel sorrow or remorse for (an act, fault, disappointment, etc.): He no sooner spoke than he regretted it.
  • reset — to set again: to reset an alarm clock; to reset a broken bone.
  • rosette — a female given name.
  • roulette — a game of chance played at a table marked off with numbers from 1 to 36, one or two zeros, and several other sections affording the players a variety of betting opportunities, and having in the center a revolving, dishlike device (roulette wheel) into which a small ball is spun to come to rest finally in one of the 37 or 38 compartments, indicating the winning number and its characteristics, as odd or even, red or black, and between 1 and 18 or 19 and 36.
  • saw set — an instrument used to bend out slightly the point of each alternate tooth of a saw so that the kerf made by the saw will be wider than its blade.
  • sextet — any group or set of six.
  • smart set — sophisticated, fashionable people as a group: a shop catering to the smart set.
  • susette — a female given name, form of Susanna or Susannah.
  • tibet — Also, Thibet. Also called Sitsang, Xizang. Official name Tibet Autonomous Region. an administrative division of China, N of the Himalayas: prior to 1950 a theocracy under the Dalai Lama; the highest country in the world, average elevation about 16,000 feet (4877 meters). 471,660 sq. mi. (1,221,599 sq. km). Capital: Lhasa.
  • unmet — simple past tense and past participle of meet1 .
  • unset — not set; not solidified or made firm, as concrete or asphalt.
  • upset — to overturn: to upset a pitcher of milk.
  • vedette — Also called vedette boat. a small naval launch used for scouting.
  • viet — South Vietnam, North Vietnam, or both.
  • vignette — a decorative design or small illustration used on the title page of a book or at the beginning or end of a chapter.
  • wilmette — a city in NE Illinois, near Chicago.
  • wynette — Tammy, original name Virginia Wynette Pugh. 1942–98, US country singer; her bestselling records include "Your Good Girl's Gonna Go Bad" (1967) and "Stand By Your Man" (1969)
  • you bet — to wager with (something or someone).
  • yvette — a female given name, form of Yvonne.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • anisette — a liquorice-flavoured liqueur made from aniseed
  • antoinette — a feminine name: dim. Nettie, Netty, Toni, Tony
  • baronet — A baronet is a man who has been made a knight. When a baronet dies, the title is passed on to his son.
  • bernadette — a feminine name
  • bouncing bet — a perennial soapwort (Saponaria officinalis) with clusters of pinkish flowers
  • calumet — a long-stemmed ceremonial pipe, smoked by North American Indians as a token of peace, at sacrifices, etc.
  • cigarette — Cigarettes are small tubes of paper containing tobacco which people smoke.
  • clarinet — A clarinet is a musical instrument of the woodwind family in the shape of a pipe. You play the clarinet by blowing into it and covering and uncovering the holes with your fingers.
  • coronet — A coronet is a small crown.
  • crepe suzette — an orange-flavoured pancake flambéed in a liqueur or brandy
  • deseret — a territory established by the Mormons in 1849 as a proposed state of the Union: was refused admission to the Union by Congress and incorporated in the newly organized Territory of Utah 1850.
  • georgette — a female given name, form of Georgia.
  • kitchenette — a very small, compact kitchen.
  • lafayette — Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier [ma-ree zhaw-zef pawl eev rawk zheel-ber dy maw-tyey] /maˈri ʒɔˈzɛf pɔl iv rɔk ʒilˈbɛr dü mɔˈtyeɪ/ (Show IPA), Marquis de. Also, La Fayette. 1757–1834, French soldier, statesman, and liberal leader, who served in the American Revolutionary Army as aide-de-camp to General Washington, and took a leading part in the French revolutions of 1789 and 1830.
  • landing net — a small, bag-shaped net with a handle at the mouth, for scooping a hooked fish out of the water and bringing it to shore or into a boat.
  • luncheonette — a small restaurant or lunchroom where light meals are served.
  • mariette — Auguste Édouard [oh-gyst ey-dwar] /oʊˈgüst eɪˈdwar/ (Show IPA), 1821–81, French Egyptologist.
  • minaret — a lofty, often slender, tower or turret attached to a mosque, surrounded by or furnished with one or more balconies, from which the muezzin calls the people to prayer.
  • minuet — a slow, stately dance in triple meter, popular in the 17th and 18th centuries.
  • nicoletJean [zhahn] /ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1598–1642, French explorer in America.
  • nicolette — a female given name, form of Nicole.
  • olivette — a large floodlight having a single bulb.
  • pinochet — Augusto (auˈɣusto). 1915-2006, Chilean general and statesman; president of Chile (1974–90) following his overthrow of Allende (1973): charged (2001) with murder and kidnapping but found unfit to stand trial
  • public debt — national debt.
  • silhouette — a two-dimensional representation of the outline of an object, as a cutout or configurational drawing, uniformly filled in with black, especially a black-paper, miniature cutout of the outlines of a person's face in profile.
  • sobriquet — a nickname.
  • statuette — a small statue.
  • string quartet — a musical composition, usually in three or four movements, for four stringed instruments, typically two violins, viola, and cello.
  • suffragette — a woman advocate of female suffrage.
  • willamette — a river flowing N through NW Oregon into the Columbia River at Portland. About 290 miles (465 km) long.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • cabriolet — A cabriolet is a type of car with two doors and a convertible top.
  • character set — a set of characters to display on a computer screen or be printed out that are all of the same design
  • flageolet — a small end-blown flute with four finger holes in front and two in the rear.
  • mosquito net — a screen, curtain, or canopy of net, gauze, or the like, for keeping out mosquitoes.
  • national debt — the financial obligations of a national government resulting from deficit spending.
  • oxygen debt — the body's oxygen deficiency resulting from strenuous physical activity.
  • receiving set — a radio receiver.
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