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Rhymes with iron

i·ron
I i

One-syllable rhymes

  • burn — If there is a fire or a flame somewhere, you say that there is a fire or flame burning there.
  • crier — a person or animal that cries
  • earn — to gain or get in return for one's labor or service: to earn one's living.
  • fern — a female given name.
  • fire — combustion
  • fired — a state, process, or instance of combustion in which fuel or other material is ignited and combined with oxygen, giving off light, heat, and flame.
  • hire — to engage the services of (a person or persons) for wages or other payment: to hire a clerk.
  • hired — Simple past tense and past participle of hire.
  • ire — intense anger; wrath.
  • learn — to acquire knowledge of or skill in by study, instruction, or experience: to learn French; to learn to ski.
  • line — a thickness of glue, as between two veneers in a sheet of plywood.
  • mine — an excavation made in the earth for the purpose of extracting ores, coal, precious stones, etc.
  • nine — a cardinal number, eight plus one.
  • pyre — a pile or heap of wood or other combustible material.
  • sire — the male parent of a quadruped.
  • tire — Archaic. to dress (the head or hair), especially with a headdress.
  • tired — having a tire or tires.
  • turn — to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
  • urn — Uniform Resource Name
  • wine — the fermented juice of grapes, made in many varieties, such as red, white, sweet, dry, still, and sparkling, for use as a beverage, in cooking, in religious rites, etc., and usually having an alcoholic content of 14 percent or less.
  • 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.
  • wired — made of wire; consisting of or constructed with wires.
  • yearn — to have an earnest or strong desire; long: to yearn for a quiet vacation.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • attire — Your attire is the clothes you are wearing.
  • brian — Havergal (ˈhævəɡəl). 1876–1972, English composer, who wrote 32 symphonies, including the large-scale Gothic Symphony (1919–27)
  • buyer — A buyer is a person who is buying something or who intends to buy it.
  • byron — George Gordon, 6th Baron. 1788–1824, British Romantic poet, noted also for his passionate and disastrous love affairs. His major works include Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1812–18), and Don Juan (1819–24). He spent much of his life abroad and died while fighting for Greek independence
  • desire — A desire is a strong wish to do or have something.
  • drier — a person or thing that dries.
  • driver — a person or thing that drives.
  • dryer — Also, drier. a machine, appliance, or apparatus for removing moisture, as by forced ventilation or heat: hair dryer; clothes dryer.
  • entire — An uncastrated male horse.
  • flyer — something that flies, as a bird or insect.
  • fryer — a person or thing that fries.
  • higher — having a great or considerable extent or reach upward or vertically; lofty; tall: a high wall.
  • ion — Classical Mythology. the eponymous ancestor of the Ionians: a son of Apollo and Creusa who is abandoned by his mother but returns to become an attendant in Apollo's temple at Delphi.
  • irons — Chemistry. a ductile, malleable, silver-white metallic element, scarcely known in a pure condition, but much used in its crude or impure carbon-containing forms for making tools, implements, machinery, etc. Symbol: Fe; atomic weight: 55.847; atomic number: 26; specific gravity: 7.86 at 20°C. Compare cast iron, pig iron, steel, wrought iron.
  • liar — MIT Scheme
  • lion — a large, usually tawny-yellow cat, Panthera leo, native to Africa and southern Asia, having a tufted tail and, in the male, a large mane.
  • myers — L(eopold) H(amilton). 1881–1944, British novelist, best known for his novel sequence The Near and the Far (1929–40)
  • plierpliers, (sometimes used with a singular verb) small pincers with long jaws, for bending wire, holding small objects, etc. (usually used with pair of).
  • required — to have need of; need: He requires medical care.
  • ryan — a male given name.
  • siren — Classical Mythology. one of several sea nymphs, part woman and part bird, who lure mariners to destruction by their seductive singing.
  • zion — a hill in Jerusalem, on which the Temple was built (used to symbolize the city itself, especially as a religious or spiritual center).
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