Rhymes with heth
heth
H h Three-syllable rhymes
- out of breath — the air inhaled and exhaled in respiration.
- put to death — the act of dying; the end of life; the total and permanent cessation of all the vital functions of an organism. Compare brain death.
- sudden death — an overtime period in which a tied contest is won and play is stopped immediately after one of the contestants scores, as in football, or goes ahead, as in golf.
- civil death — (formerly) the loss of all civil rights because of a serious conviction
- dance of death — a pictorial, literary, or musical representation, current esp in the Middle Ages, of a dance in which living people, in order of social precedence, are led off to their graves, by a personification of death
- living death — a completely miserable, joyless existence, experience, situation, etc.; ordeal: He found the steaming jungle a living death.
- marybeth — a female given name.
Four-or-more syllable rhymes
- catch one's breath — When you catch your breath while you are doing something energetic, you stop for a short time so that you can start breathing normally again.
One-syllable rhymes
- beth — the second letter of the Hebrew alphabet (ב) transliterated as b
- breath — Your breath is the air that you let out through your mouth when you breathe. If someone has bad breath, their breath smells unpleasant.
- death — Death is the permanent end of the life of a person or animal.
- meth — methamphetamine; Methedrine.
- seth — the brother and murderer of Osiris, represented as having the form of a donkey or other mammal and regarded as personifying the desert.
Two-syllable rhymes
- black death — a deadly disease, probably bubonic plague, which devastated Europe and Asia in the 14th cent.
- brain death — Brain death occurs when someone's brain stops functioning, even though their heart may be kept beating using a machine.
- cot death — Cot death is the sudden death of a baby while it is asleep, although the baby had not previously been ill.
- crib death — Crib death is the sudden death of a baby while it is asleep, although the baby had not previously been ill.
- macbeth — died 1057, king of Scotland 1040–57.