Rhymes with lineage
lin·e·age
L l One-syllable rhymes
- bridge — A bridge is a structure that is built over a railway, river, or road so that people or vehicles can cross from one side to the other.
- fridge — a refrigerator.
- kindred — a person's relatives collectively; kinfolk; kin.
- midge — any of numerous minute dipterous insects, especially of the family Chironomidae, somewhat resembling a mosquito. Compare gnat (def 1).
- ridge — a long, narrow elevation of land; a chain of hills or mountains.
Two-syllable rhymes
- children — Children is the plural of child.
- damage — To damage an object means to break it, spoil it physically, or stop it from working properly.
- finish — to bring (something) to an end or to completion; complete: to finish a novel; to finish breakfast.
- kinship — the state or fact of being of kin; family relationship.
- language — a body of words and the systems for their use common to a people who are of the same community or nation, the same geographical area, or the same cultural tradition: the two languages of Belgium; a Bantu language; the French language; the Yiddish language.
- linage — the number of printed lines, especially agate lines covered by a magazine article, newspaper advertisement, etc.
- linkage — the act of linking; state or manner of being linked.
- little — small in size; not big; not large; tiny: a little desk in the corner of the room.
- minute — the sixtieth part (1/60) of an hour; sixty seconds.
- passage — a slow, cadenced trot executed with great elevation of the feet and characterized by a moment of suspension before the feet strike the ground.
- pillage — to strip ruthlessly of money or goods by open violence, as in war; plunder: The barbarians pillaged every conquered city.
- scrimmage — a rough or vigorous struggle.
- spinach — a plant, Spinacia oleracea, cultivated for its edible, crinkly or flat leaves.
- vintage — the wine from a particular harvest or crop.
- visage — the face, usually with reference to shape, features, expression, etc.; countenance.
- vision — the act or power of sensing with the eyes; sight.