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Rhymes with incognito

in·cog·ni·to
I i

Two-syllable rhymes

  • ito — Prince Hirobumi [hee-raw-boo-mee] /ˈhi rɔˈbu mi/ (Show IPA), 1841–1909, Japanese statesman.
  • leto — the mother by Zeus of Apollo and Artemis, called Latona by the Romans.
  • peto — wahoo3 .
  • quito — a republic in NW South America. 109,483 sq. mi. (283,561 sq. km). Capital: Quito.
  • seato — an organization formed in Manila (1954), comprising Australia, Great Britain, France, New Zealand, Pakistan, the Philippines, Thailand, and the United States, for collective defense against aggression in southeastern Asia and the southwestern Pacific: abolished in 1977.
  • titoMarshal (Josip Broz) 1891–1980, president of Yugoslavia 1953–80.
  • veto — the power or right vested in one branch of a government to cancel or postpone the decisions, enactments, etc., of another branch, especially the right of a president, governor, or other chief executive to reject bills passed by the legislature.
  • vito — a male given name.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • bonito — any of various small tunny-like marine food fishes of the genus Sarda, of warm Atlantic and Pacific waters: family Scombridae (tunnies and mackerels)
  • burrito — A burrito is a tortilla containing a filling of ground beef, chicken, cheese, or beans.
  • miskito — a member of an American Indian people of northeastern Nicaragua and adjacent areas of Honduras.
  • mosquito — any of numerous dipterous insects of the family Culicidae, the females of which suck the blood of animals and humans, some species transmitting certain diseases, as malaria and yellow fever.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • sausalito — a town in W California on San Fransisco Bay: resort; formerly artist's colony.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • marielito — a refugee from Cuba who came to the U.S. in 1980 as part of a mass migration that sailed from Mariel, Cuba.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • asian tiger mosquito — a mosquito, Aedes albopictus, native to Asia, that transmits yellow fever and dengue and possibly West Nile virus. Compare yellow-fever mosquito.
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