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Rhymes with hour

hour
H h

Two-syllable rhymes

  • trouser — of or relating to trousers or a trouser: trouser cuffs; a trouser seam.
  • water — a liquid solution or preparation, especially one used for cosmetic purposes: lavender water; lemon water.
  • bower — A bower is a shady, leafy shelter in a garden or wood.
  • browser — A browser is someone who browses in a shop.
  • chowder — Chowder is a thick soup containing pieces of fish.
  • counter — In a place such as a shop or café, a counter is a long narrow table or flat surface at which customers are served.
  • coward — If you call someone a coward, you disapprove of them because they are easily frightened and avoid dangerous or difficult situations.
  • cowards — Plural form of coward.
  • cower — If you cower, you bend forward and downwards because you are very frightened.
  • desire — A desire is a strong wish to do or have something.
  • devour — If a person or animal devours something, they eat it quickly and eagerly.
  • devoured — Simple past tense and past participle of devour.
  • dollar — a paper money, silver or cupronickel coin, and monetary unit of the United States, equal to 100 cents. Symbol: $.
  • doubter — to be uncertain about; consider questionable or unlikely; hesitate to believe.
  • dower — Law. the portion of a deceased husband's real property allowed to his widow for her lifetime.
  • downer — Informal. a depressant or sedative drug, especially a barbiturate. a depressing experience, person, or situation.
  • flower — the blossom of a plant.
  • flowers — the blossom of a plant.
  • glower — to look or stare with sullen dislike, discontent, or anger.
  • gowerJohn, 1325?–1408, English poet.
  • higher — having a great or considerable extent or reach upward or vertically; lofty; tall: a high wall.
  • honor — honesty, fairness, or integrity in one's beliefs and actions: a man of honor.
  • howardCatherine, c1520–42, fifth wife of Henry VIII.
  • hower — a hole.
  • louder — (of sound) strongly audible; having exceptional volume or intensity: loud talking; loud thunder; loud whispers.
  • lower — to cause to descend; let or put down: to lower a flag.
  • matter — a dull or dead surface, often slightly roughened, as on metals, paint, paper, or glass.
  • mower — lawn mower.
  • outer — situated on or toward the outside; external; exterior: outer garments; an outer wall.
  • over — above in place or position: the roof over one's head.
  • powder — British Dialect. a sudden, frantic, or impulsive rush.
  • power — a heavy blow or a loud, explosive noise.
  • powered — operated or driven by a motor or electricity: a power mower; power tools.
  • powers — ability to do or act; capability of doing or accomplishing something.
  • prowler — a person or animal that prowls.
  • shower — a person or thing that shows.
  • soy flour — finely ground soybeans, most commonly used as an additive to other flours, processed meats, cereals, etc.
  • tower — the fiber of flax, hemp, or jute prepared for spinning by scutching.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • air power — A nation's air power is the strength of its air force.
  • auer — Karl (karl), Baron von Welsbach. 1858–1929, Austrian chemist who discovered the alloy of cerium and iron used for flints in cigarette lighters and invented the incandescent gas mantle
  • bauer — Georg [gey-awrk] /geɪˈɔrk/ (Show IPA), Agricola, Georgius.
  • carte du jour — a menu listing dishes available on a particular day
  • dauer — (nematology) A developmental stage of certain nematode larvae in which they exhibit increased durability.
  • empower — Give (someone) the authority or power to do something.
  • fire tower — a tower, as on a mountain, from which a watch for fires is kept.
  • graham flour — unbolted wheat flour, containing all of the wheat grain; whole-wheat flour.
  • great power — a nation that has exceptional military and economic strength, and consequently plays a major, often decisive, role in international affairs.
  • rain shower — a brief rainfall, usually of variable intensity.
  • ray flower — one of the marginal florets surrounding the disk of tubular florets in the flower heads of certain composite plants, as the daisy.
  • sea power — naval strength.
  • shot tower — a tower from the top of which finely divided streams of molten lead are dropped down a central well, breaking up into spherical drops during their fall to be quenched and hardened in a tank of water at the bottom.
  • soup du jour — the soup featured by a restaurant on a particular day.
  • stock power — a power of attorney permitting a person other than the owner of stock in a corporation to transfer the title of ownership to a third party.
  • whiskey sour — a cocktail made with whiskey, lemon juice, and sugar.
  • wild flower — the flower of a plant that normally grows in fields, forests, etc., without deliberate cultivation.
  • wind power — power derived from wind: used to generate electricity or mechanical power.
  • world power — a nation, organization, or institution so powerful that it is capable of influencing or changing the course of world events.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • basket flower — a composite plant, Centaurea americana, of central U.S. to Mexico, having raylike heads of tubular rose-colored flowers, each surrounded by a whorl of bracts making the flower head appear as if it is set in a basket.
  • carrion flower — a liliaceous climbing plant, Smilax herbacea of E North America, whose small green flowers smell like decaying flesh
  • conning tower — a superstructure of a submarine, used as the bridge when the vessel is on the surface
  • control tower — A control tower is a building at an airport from which instructions are given to aircraft when they are taking off or landing. You can also refer to the people who work in a control tower as the control tower.
  • cooling tower — A cooling tower is a very large, round, high building which is used to cool water from factories or power stations.
  • corkscrew flower — snailflower.
  • flower power — Flower power is an old-fashioned way of referring to hippies and the culture associated with hippies in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
  • meteor shower — the profusion of meteors observed when the earth passes through a meteor swarm.
  • motive power — any power used to impart motion; any source of mechanical energy.
  • nuclear power — power derived from nuclear energy.
  • overpower — to overcome, master, or subdue by superior force: to overpower a maniac.
  • solar power — energy generated by the sun
  • starfish flower — carrion flower (def 2).
  • staying power — ability or strength to last or endure; endurance; stamina.
  • superpower — an extremely powerful nation, especially one capable of influencing international events and the acts and policies of less powerful nations.
  • tassel flower — love-lies-bleeding.
  • trumpet flower — any of various plants with pendent flowers shaped like a trumpet.
  • water tower — a vertical pipe or tower into which water is pumped to a height sufficient to maintain a desired pressure for firefighting, distribution to customers, etc.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • atomic power — nuclear power.
  • balance of power — The balance of power is the way in which power is distributed between rival groups or countries.
  • butterfly flower — Also called Jerusalem date. a shrub or small tree, Bauhinia monandra, of French Guiana, having clusters of pink, purple-streaked flowers.
  • cardinal flower — a campanulaceous plant, Lobelia cardinalis of E North America, that has brilliant scarlet, pink, or white flowers
  • ivory tower — a place or situation remote from worldly or practical affairs: the university as an ivory tower.
  • martello tower — a circular, towerlike fort with guns on the top.
  • moccasin flower — the lady's-slipper.
  • paradise flower — a prickly vine, Solanum wendlandii, of the nightshade family, native to Costa Rica, having branched clusters of showy lilac-blue flowers.
  • resolving power — Optics. the ability of an optical device to produce separate images of close objects.

One-syllable rhymes

  • dour — sullen; gloomy: The captain's dour look depressed us all.
  • fire — combustion
  • flour — the finely ground meal of grain, especially the finer meal separated by bolting.
  • giaour — an unbeliever; a non-Muslim, especially a Christian.
  • hours — a period of time equal to one twenty-fourth of a mean solar or civil day and equivalent to 60 minutes: He slept for an hour.
  • lour — lower2 .
  • mph — Miles per hour.
  • n'dour — Youssou (ˈjusu). born 1959, Senegalese singer and musician, whose work has popularized African music in the West; recordings include Nelson Mandela (1986), Eyes Open (1992), and Nothing's in Vain (2002)
  • our — (used to denote the narrator of a literary work written in the first person singular).
  • ours — (used to denote the narrator of a literary work written in the first person singular).
  • scour — to range over, as in a search: They scoured the countryside for the lost child.
  • sour — having an acid taste, resembling that of vinegar, lemon juice, etc.; tart.
  • tire — Archaic. to dress (the head or hair), especially with a headdress.
  • tired — having a tire or tires.
  • were — a 2nd person singular pt. indicative, plural past indicative, and past subjunctive of be.
  • wire — a slender, stringlike piece or filament of relatively rigid or flexible metal, usually circular in section, manufactured in a great variety of diameters and metals depending on its application.
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