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Rhymes with kodak

Ko·dak
K k

One-syllable rhymes

  • ack — (military, now historical) The letter A as used in signalling and other types of communications.
  • back — If you move back, you move in the opposite direction to the one in which you are facing or in which you were moving before.
  • crack — If something hard cracks, or if you crack it, it becomes slightly damaged, with lines appearing on its surface.
  • dack — to remove the trousers from (someone) by force
  • dak — a system of mail delivery or passenger transport by relays of bearers or horses stationed at intervals along a route
  • hack — to place (something) on a hack, as for drying or feeding.
  • jackSir John Arthur ("Jack") 1926–2014, Australian racing-car driver and designer.
  • lack — something missing or needed: After he left, they really felt the lack.
  • mac — a male given name.
  • mack — a mackintosh.
  • pack — a group of things wrapped or tied together for easy handling or carrying; a bundle, especially one to be carried on the back of an animal or a person: a mule pack; a hiker's pack.
  • rack — the neck portion of mutton, pork, or veal.
  • sack — a strong light-colored wine formerly imported from Spain and the Canary Islands.
  • smackArthur, 1863–1935, British statesman and labor leader: Nobel Peace Prize 1934.
  • snack — a small portion of food or drink or a light meal, especially one eaten between regular meals.
  • stack — a more or less orderly pile or heap: a precariously balanced stack of books; a neat stack of papers.
  • tack — a lease, especially on farmland.
  • track — a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
  • wack — wacko.
  • whack — to strike with a smart, resounding blow or blows.
  • yack — to talk, especially uninterruptedly and idly; gab; chatter: They've been yakking on the phone for over an hour.
  • yak — a loud, hearty laugh.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • attack — To attack a person or place means to try to hurt or damage them using physical violence.
  • cognac — Cognac is a type of brandy made in the south west of France.
  • kayak — an Eskimo canoe with a skin cover on a light framework, made watertight by flexible closure around the waist of the occupant and propelled with a double-bladed paddle.
  • local — low-cal.
  • modal — of or relating to mode, manner, or form.
  • mohawk — a member of a tribe of the most easterly of the Iroquois Five Nations, formerly resident along the Mohawk River, New York.
  • nomad — a member of a people or tribe that has no permanent abode but moves about from place to place, usually seasonally and often following a traditional route or circuit according to the state of the pasturage or food supply.
  • polack — Slang: Extremely Disparaging and Offensive. a contemptuous term used to refer to a Pole or person of Polish descent.
  • prozac — Prozac is a drug that is used to treat people who are suffering from depression.
  • rollback — an act or instance of rolling back.
  • soda — Symbolic Optimum DEUCE Assembly Program
  • throwback — an act of throwing back.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • kodiak — an island in the N Pacific, near the base of the Alaska Peninsula. 100 miles (160 km) long.
  • zodiac — an imaginary belt of the heavens, extending about 8° on each side of the ecliptic, within which are the apparent paths of the sun, moon, and principal planets. It contains twelve constellations and hence twelve divisions called signs of the zodiac. Each division, however, because of the precession of the equinoxes, now contains the constellation west of the one from which it took its name. Compare sign of the zodiac.
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