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Rhymes with fat

fat
F f

One-syllable rhymes

  • at — You use at to indicate the place or event where something happens or is situated.
  • bat — A bat is a specially shaped piece of wood that is used for hitting the ball in baseball, softball, cricket, rounders, or table tennis.
  • batt — a slab-shaped piece of insulating material used in building houses
  • brat — If you call someone, especially a child, a brat, you mean that he or she behaves badly or annoys you.
  • cat — A cat is a furry animal that has a long tail and sharp claws. Cats are often kept as pets.
  • catt — Carrie Chapman1859-1947; U.S. leader in the movement for women's suffrage
  • chat — When people chat, they talk to each other in an informal and friendly way.
  • dat — DAT is a type of magnetic tape used to make very high quality recordings of sound by recording it in digital form. DAT is an abbreviation for 'digital audio tape'.
  • flat — horizontally level: a flat roof.
  • gat — simple past tense of get.
  • gatt — law: General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
  • glatt — (Yinglish, of an animal, Judaism) Having none of a particular kind of adhesion on the outside of its lungs; only meat from a glatt animal can be kosher.
  • gnat — any of certain small flies, especially the biting gnats or punkies of the family Ceratopogonidae, the midges of the family Chironomidae, and the black flies of the family Simuliidae.
  • hat — a shaped covering for the head, usually with a crown and brim, especially for wear outdoors.
  • kat — an evergreen shrub, Catha edulis, of Arabia and Africa, the leaves of which are used as a narcotic when chewed or made into a beverage.
  • lat — a former silver coin of Latvia, equal to 100 santimi.
  • mat — a dull or dead surface, often slightly roughened, as on metals, paint, paper, or glass.
  • matt — to finish with a matte surface.
  • matte — having a dull or lusterless surface: matte paint; a matte complexion; a photograph with a matte finish.
  • nat — Network Address Translation
  • pat — to strike lightly or gently with something flat, as with a paddle or the palm of the hand, usually in order to flatten, smooth, or shape: to pat dough into flat pastry forms.
  • platte — a river flowing E from the junction of the North and South Platte rivers in central Nebraska to the Missouri River S of Omaha. 310 miles (500 km) long.
  • prattEdwin John, 1883–1964, Canadian poet.
  • rat — any of several long-tailed rodents of the family Muridae, of the genus Rattus and related genera, distinguished from the mouse by being larger.
  • sat — (in prescriptions) may it be.
  • scat — to sing by making full or partial use of the technique of scat singing.
  • slat — a slap; a sharp blow.
  • spat — a pointed rod or bar for thrusting through and holding meat that is to be cooked before or over a fire.
  • splat — a sound made by splattering or slapping.
  • stat — statistic.
  • tat — sth cheap and tacky
  • that — (used with adjectives and adverbs of quantity or extent) to the extent or degree indicated: that much; The fish was that big.
  • vat — a large container, as a tub or tank, used for storing or holding liquids: a wine vat.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • at-bat — Sports. the wooden club used in certain games, as baseball and cricket, to strike the ball. a racket, especially one used in badminton or table tennis. a whip used by a jockey. the act of using a club or racket in a game. the right or turn to use a club or racket.
  • bath mat — a mat or washable rug used to stand on when entering or leaving a bath.
  • begat — simple past tense of beget.
  • black rat — a common rat, Rattus rattus: a household pest that has spread from its native Asia to all countries
  • brass hat — a top-ranking official, esp a military officer
  • brown bat — any of several small to medium-sized common bats of the genera Myotis and Eptesicus, found worldwide in caves, trees, and buildings, including M. lucifugus (little brown bat) and E. fuscus (big brown bat) a widespread North American species.
  • brown rat — a common brownish rat, Rattus norvegicus: a serious pest in all parts of the world
  • cocked hat — A cocked hat is a hat with three corners that used to be worn with some uniforms.
  • combat — Combat is fighting that takes place in a war.
  • coon cat — cacomistle
  • fall flat — horizontally level: a flat roof.
  • fruit bat — any fruit-eating bat, especially of the suborder Megachiroptera, of tropical regions throughout the Old World, typically having erect, catlike ears and large eyes adapted for night vision, and either tailless or with a rudimentary tail, the numerous species ranging in wingspan from 10 inches to 5 feet (25 cm to 1.5 meters).
  • gall gnat — any of several dipterous insects of the family Cecidomyiidae, the larvae of which form characteristic galls on plants.
  • get at — to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension.
  • in that — (used to indicate inclusion within space, a place, or limits): walking in the park.
  • landsat — a U.S. scientific satellite that studies and photographs the earth's surface by using remote-sensing techniques.
  • laugh at — to express mirth, pleasure, derision, or nervousness with an audible, vocal expulsion of air from the lungs that can range from a loud burst of sound to a series of quiet chuckles and is usually accompanied by characteristic facial and bodily movements.
  • manx cat — a tailless variety of the domestic cat.
  • mud flat — the muddy, nearly level bed of a dry lake.
  • nonfat — without fat or fat solids; having the fat solids removed, as skim milk: nonfat milk.
  • north platte — a river flowing from N Colorado through SE Wyoming and W Nebraska into the Platte. 618 miles (995 sq. km) long.
  • pick at — to choose or select from among a group: to pick a contestant from the audience.
  • place mat — a mat set on a dining table beneath a place setting.
  • play at — a dramatic composition or piece; drama.
  • plug hat — plug (def 19).
  • rice rat — any rat of the genus Oryzomys, having an exceptionally long tail, especially O. palustris, inhabiting rice fields and marshes of the southern U.S., Mexico, and Central America.
  • roof rat — a black rat, Rattus rattus alexandrinus, often found on the upper floors of buildings in warm areas.
  • sadat — Anwar el- [ahn-wahr el] /ˈɑn wɑr ɛl/ (Show IPA), 1918–81, Egyptian political leader: president 1970–81; Nobel Peace Prize 1978.
  • sand rat — gerbil.
  • silk hat — a tall, cylindrical, black hat covered with silk plush, worn by men for formal dress. Compare beaver1 (def 4), opera hat, top hat.
  • slouch hat — a soft hat often made of felt and having a supple, usually broad brim.
  • snap at — to make a sudden, sharp, distinct sound; crack, as a whip; crackle.
  • south platte — a river flowing NE from central Colorado to the Platte River in W Nebraska. 424 miles (683 km) long.
  • stand pat — exactly to the point or purpose; apt; opportune: a pat solution to a problem.
  • straw hat — of or relating to a summer theater situated outside an urban or metropolitan area: strawhat theater; strawhat circuit.
  • tin hat — a steel helmet worn by soldiers.
  • trade rat — pack rat (def 1).
  • wharf rat — a large brown rat that is commonly found on wharves.
  • wing flat — a flat, especially a two-fold, usually forming part of a unit of four panels of painted scenery.
  • wink at — to close and open one or both eyes quickly.
  • wood rat — pack rat (def 1).

Three-syllable rhymes

  • alley cat — An alley cat is a cat that lives in the streets of a town, is rather fierce, and is usually not owned by anyone.
  • arrive at — to reach by traveling
  • big brown bat — any of several small to medium-sized common bats of the genera Myotis and Eptesicus, found worldwide in caves, trees, and buildings, including M. lucifugus (little brown bat) and E. fuscus (big brown bat) a widespread North American species.
  • burmese cat — a breed of cat similar in shape to the Siamese but typically having a dark brown or blue-grey coat
  • campaign hat — a felt hat with a broad, stiff brim and four dents in the crown, formerly worn by personnel in the U.S. Army and Marine Corps.
  • cowboy hat — a wide-brimmed hat as worn by cowboys
  • desert rat — a jerboa, Jaculus orientalis, inhabiting the deserts of N Africa
  • fungus gnat — any of several mosquitolike insects of the family Mycetophilidae, the larvae of which feed on fungi or decaying vegetation.
  • gujarat — a region in W India, N of the Narmada River.
  • little brown bat — any of several small to medium-sized common bats of the genera Myotis and Eptesicus, found worldwide in caves, trees, and buildings, including M. lucifugus (little brown bat) and E. fuscus (big brown bat) a widespread North American species.
  • maltese cat — a bluish-gray variety of the domestic cat.
  • mastiff bat — any insectivorous bat of the family Molossidae, found in warm areas throughout the world, having a naked tail, folded ears, and small wings and most often seen running along the ground.
  • naked mole rat — a nearly hairless rodent, Heterocephalus glaber, of eastern African dry steppes and savannas, having two protruding upper and lower front teeth and living entirely underground in colonies, based on a single breeding female and specialized workers of both sexes.
  • native cat — any of several catlike dasyures of the genus Dasyurus, of Australia and Tasmania: most populations are now rare.
  • norway rat — an Old World rat, Rattus norvegicus, having a grayish-brown body with whitish underparts and a long, scaly tail, now common in the U.S. in or near homes, barns, wharves, etc.
  • persian cat — a long-haired variety of the domestic cat, originally raised in Persia and Afghanistan.
  • picture hat — a woman's hat having a very broad, flexible brim, often decorated with feathers, flowers, or the like.
  • railroad flat — an apartment whose series of narrow rooms forms a more or less straight line.
  • rat-a-tat — a sound of knocking or rapping: a sharp rat-a-tat on the window.
  • shovel hat — a hat with a broad brim turned up at the sides and projecting with a shovellike curve in front and behind; worn by some ecclesiastics, chiefly in England.
  • siamese cat — one of a breed of slender, short-haired cats, raised originally in Siam, having a fawn or grayish body with extremities of a darker shade of the same color.
  • tiger cat — any of several felines, as the ocelot or margay, that resemble the tiger in coloration or ferocity but are smaller.
  • tit for tat — with an equivalent given in retaliation, as a blow for a blow, repartee, etc.: He answered their insults tit for tat.
  • vampire bat — any of several New World tropical bats of the genera Desmodus, Diphylla, and Diaemus, the size of a small mouse, feeding on small amounts of blood obtained from resting mammals and birds by means of a shallow cut made with specialized incisor teeth.
  • water rat — any of various rodents having aquatic habits.
  • welcome mat — a doormat, especially one with the word “welcome” printed on it.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • angora cat — a long-haired variety of cat, originating in Britain from crosses between Abyssinian and Siamese breeds in the 1960s
  • buffalo gnat — any of various small North American blood-sucking dipterous insects of the genus Simulium and related genera: family Simuliidae
  • calico cat — a domestic cat, especially a female one, of variegated black, yellow, and white coloring.
  • horseshoe bat — any of numerous large-eared Old World insectivorous bats, mostly of the genus Rhinolophus, with a fleshy growth around the nostrils, used in echolocation: family Rhinolophidae
  • kangaroo rat — any of various small jumping rodents of the family Heteromyidae, of Mexico and the western U.S.
  • opera hat — a man's tall, collapsible top hat, held open or in shape by springs and usually covered with a black, silky fabric. Also called gibus. Compare beaver1 (def 4), silk hat, top hat.
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