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Rhymes with gossiper

gos·sip
G g

Two-syllable rhymes

  • gobbler — a person or thing that gobbles or consumes voraciously or quickly: a gobbler of science fiction.
  • gossip — idle talk or rumor, especially about the personal or private affairs of others: the endless gossip about Hollywood stars.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • alcazar — any of various palaces or fortresses built in Spain by the Moors
  • almoner — In Britain, an almoner is a social worker who works in a hospital.
  • blockbuster — A blockbuster is a film or book that is very popular and successful, usually because it is very exciting.
  • bolivar — the standard monetary unit of Venezuela, equal to 100 céntimos
  • colander — A colander is a container in the shape of a bowl with holes in it which you wash or drain food in.
  • commissar — an official of the Communist Party responsible for political education, esp in a military unit
  • commodore — A commodore is an officer of senior rank in the navy, especially the British Royal Navy.
  • commoner — In countries which have a nobility, commoners are the people who are not members of the nobility.
  • conifer — Conifers are a group of trees and shrubs, for example pine trees and fir trees, that grow in cooler areas of the world. They have fruit called cones, and very thin leaves called needles which they do not normally lose in winter.
  • consular — Consular means involving or relating to a consul or the work of a consul.
  • globular — globe-shaped; spherical.
  • godmother — a woman who serves as sponsor for a child at baptism.
  • gossamer — a fine, filmy cobweb seen on grass or bushes or floating in the air in calm weather, especially in autumn.
  • hollanderJohn, 1929–2013, U.S. poet and critic.
  • jocular — given to, characterized by, intended for, or suited to joking or jesting; waggish; facetious: jocular remarks about opera stars.
  • modular — of or relating to a module or a modulus.
  • monitor — (especially formerly) a student appointed to assist in the conduct of a class or school, as to help take attendance or keep order.
  • monomer — a molecule of low molecular weight capable of reacting with identical or different molecules of low molecular weight to form a polymer.
  • nodular — of, relating to, or characterized by nodules.
  • oliver — one of the 12 paladins of Charlemagne. Compare Roland.
  • polymer — a compound of high molecular weight derived either by the addition of many smaller molecules, as polyethylene, or by the condensation of many smaller molecules with the elimination of water, alcohol, or the like, as nylon.
  • pompadourMarquise de (Jeanne Antoinette Poisson Le Normant d'Étioles) 1721–64, mistress of Louis XV of France.
  • popular — regarded with favor, approval, or affection by people in general: a popular preacher.
  • worshiper — reverent honor and homage paid to God or a sacred personage, or to any object regarded as sacred.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • astrologer — An astrologer is a person who uses astrology to try to tell you things about your character and your future.
  • astronomer — An astronomer is a scientist who studies the stars, planets, and other natural objects in space.
  • binocular — involving, relating to, seeing with or intended for both eyes
  • biographer — Someone's biographer is a person who writes an account of their life.
  • demographer — the science of vital and social statistics, as of the births, deaths, diseases, marriages, etc., of populations.
  • fluorometer — an instrument for measuring fluorescence, often as a means of determining the nature of the substance emitting the fluorescence.
  • geographer — a person who specializes in geographical research, delineation, and study.
  • hydrometer — an instrument for determining the specific gravity of a liquid, commonly consisting of a graduated tube weighted to float upright in the liquid whose specific gravity is being measured.
  • hygrometer — any instrument for measuring the water-vapor content of the atmosphere.
  • kilometer — a unit of length, the common measure of distances equal to 1000 meters, and equivalent to 3280.8 feet or 0.621 mile. Abbreviation: km.
  • micrometer — micron (def 1).
  • odometer — an instrument for measuring distance traveled, as by an automobile.
  • philosopher — a person who offers views or theories on profound questions in ethics, metaphysics, logic, and other related fields.
  • photographer — a person who takes photographs, especially one who practices photography professionally.
  • pornographer — a person who sells, produces, films, photographs, or writes pornography.
  • spectrometer — an optical device for measuring wavelengths, deviation of refracted rays, and angles between faces of a prism, especially an instrument (prism spectrometer) consisting of a slit through which light passes, a collimator, a prism that deviates the light, and a telescope through which the deviated light is viewed and examined.
  • speedometer — an instrument on an automobile or other vehicle for indicating the rate of travel in miles or kilometers per hour.
  • thermometer — an instrument for measuring temperature, often a sealed glass tube that contains a column of liquid, as mercury, that expands and contracts, or rises and falls, with temperature changes, the temperature being read where the top of the column coincides with a calibrated scale marked on the tube or its frame.
  • unpopular — not popular; disliked or ignored by the public or by persons generally.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • anemometer — an instrument for recording the speed and often the direction of winds
  • choreographer — A choreographer is someone who invents the movements for a ballet or other dance and tells the dancers how to perform them.
  • densitometer — an instrument for measuring the optical density of a material by directing a beam of light onto the specimen and measuring its transmission or reflection
  • dynamometer — An instrument that measures the power output of an engine.
  • gas thermometer — a device for measuring temperature by observing the change in either pressure or volume of an enclosed gas.
  • goniometer — an instrument for measuring solid angles, as of crystals.
  • interlocutor — a person who takes part in a conversation or dialogue.
  • lexicographer — a writer, editor, or compiler of a dictionary.
  • magnetometer — an instrument for measuring the intensity of a magnetic field, especially the earth's magnetic field.
  • mass spectrometer — a device for identifying the kinds of particles present in a given substance: the particles are ionized and beamed through an electromagnetic field and the manner in which they are deflected is indicative of their mass and, thus, their identity.
  • vinyl polymer — any of a group of compounds derived by polymerization from vinyl compounds, as vinyl acetate and styrene.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • accelerometer — an instrument for measuring acceleration, esp of an aircraft or rocket
  • autobiographer — a person who writes the story of his or her own life
  • cinematographer — A cinematographer is a person who decides what filming techniques should be used during the shooting of a film.
  • interferometer — Optics. a device that separates a beam of light into two ray beams, usually by means of reflection, and that brings the rays together to produce interference, used to measure wavelength, index of refraction, and astronomical distances.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • clinical thermometer — a finely calibrated thermometer for determining the temperature of the body, usually placed under the tongue, in the armpit, or in the rectum
  • resistance thermometer — an instrument for measuring the temperature of a metal, utilizing the principle that the electrical resistance of the metal varies with the temperature.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • radio interferometer — any of several different types of instrumentation designed to observe interference patterns of electromagnetic radiation at radio wavelengths: used in the discovery and measurement of radio sources in the atmosphere.
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