Rhymes with golfer
golf
G g One-syllable rhymes
- ball — A ball is a round object that is used in games such as tennis, baseball, football, basketball, and cricket.
- course — Course is often used in the expression 'of course', or instead of 'of course' in informal spoken English. See of course.
- for — for loop
- golf — a game in which clubs with wooden or metal heads are used to hit a small, white ball into a number of holes, usually 9 or 18, in succession, situated at various distances over a course having natural or artificial obstacles, the object being to get the ball into each hole in as few strokes as possible.
- sport — an athletic activity requiring skill or physical prowess and often of a competitive nature, as racing, baseball, tennis, golf, bowling, wrestling, boxing, hunting, fishing, etc.
- war — a conflict carried on by force of arms, as between nations or between parties within a nation; warfare, as by land, sea, or air.
Two-syllable rhymes
- alter — If something alters or if you alter it, it changes.
- baller — a ball-game player, esp in basketball
- coffer — A coffer is a large strong chest used for storing valuable objects such as money or gold and silver.
- dancer — A dancer is a person who earns money by dancing, or a person who is dancing.
- doctor — a person licensed to practice medicine, as a physician, surgeon, dentist, or veterinarian.
- dollar — a paper money, silver or cupronickel coin, and monetary unit of the United States, equal to 100 cents. Symbol: $.
- driver — a person or thing that drives.
- duffer — Informal. a plodding, clumsy, incompetent person. a person inept or inexperienced at a specific sport, as golf.
- gopher — an employee whose chief duty is running errands.
- hacker — a person, as an artist or writer, who exploits, for money, his or her creative ability or training in the production of dull, unimaginative, and trite work; one who produces banal and mediocre work in the hope of gaining commercial success in the arts: As a painter, he was little more than a hack.
- holder — something that holds or secures: a pencil holder.
- hunter — John, 1728–93, Scottish surgeon, physiologist, and biologist.
- lawyer — a person whose profession is to represent clients in a court of law or to advise or act for clients in other legal matters.
- loafer — a person who loafs; lazy person; idler.
- monster — a legendary animal combining features of animal and human form or having the forms of various animals in combination, as a centaur, griffin, or sphinx.
- offer — to present for acceptance or rejection; proffer: He offered me a cigarette.
- pauper — a person without any means of support, especially a destitute person who depends on aid from public welfare funds or charity.
- putter — to busy or occupy oneself in a leisurely, casual, or ineffective manner: to putter in the garden.
- sailor — a person whose occupation is sailing or navigation; mariner.
- saucer — a small, round, shallow dish to hold a cup.
- solver — to find the answer or explanation for; clear up; explain: to solve the mystery of the missing books.
- stalker — a person who pursues game, prey, or a person stealthily.
- sulfur — Also, especially British, sulphur. Chemistry. a nonmetallic element that exists in several forms, the ordinary one being a yellow rhombic crystalline solid, and that burns with a blue flame and a suffocating odor: used especially in making gunpowder and matches, in medicine, in vulcanizing rubber, etc. Symbol: S; atomic weight: 32.064; atomic number: 16; specific gravity: 2.07 at 20° C.
- sulphur — a city in SW Louisiana.
- summer — a principal beam or girder, as one running between girts to support joists.
- talker — to communicate or exchange ideas, information, etc., by speaking: to talk about poetry.
- tiger — the cougar, jaguar, thylacine, or other animal resembling the tiger.
- vulture — any of several large, primarily carrion-eating Old World birds of prey of the family Accipitridae, often having a naked head and less powerful feet than those of the related hawks and eagles.
- walker — Alice, born 1944, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
- watcher — a person who watches or who keeps watch.
- writer — a person engaged in writing books, articles, stories, etc., especially as an occupation or profession; an author or journalist.