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Rhymes with mater

ma·ter
M m

Two-syllable rhymes

  • attar — an essential oil from flowers, esp the damask rose, used pure or as a base for perfume
  • batter — If someone is battered, they are regularly hit and badly hurt by a member of their family or by their partner.
  • blatter — a prattle
  • blotter — A blotter is a large sheet of blotting paper kept in a special holder on a desk.
  • cater — In British English, to cater for a group of people means to provide all the things that they need or want. In American English, you say you cater to a person or group of people.
  • chatter — If you chatter, you talk quickly and continuously, usually about things which are not important.
  • clatter — If you say that people or things clatter somewhere, you mean that they move there noisily.
  • cotter — any part, such as a pin, wedge, key, etc, that is used to secure two other parts so that relative motion between them is prevented
  • crater — A crater is a very large hole in the ground, which has been caused by something hitting it or by an explosion.
  • dotter — a small, roundish mark made with or as if with a pen.
  • fatter — having too much flabby tissue; corpulent; obese: a fat person.
  • flatter — to make flat.
  • frater — the refectory of a religious house.
  • freighter — a vessel used mainly for carrying cargo.
  • gaiter — a covering of cloth or leather for the ankle and instep and sometimes also the lower leg, worn over the shoe or boot. Compare upper1 (def 7).
  • gator — Southern U.S. Informal. alligator.
  • grater — a person or thing that grates.
  • greater — unusually or comparatively large in size or dimensions: A great fire destroyed nearly half the city.
  • hater — a person who has an intense dislike for another person or thing (often used in combination): I'm a big hater of opera. Are you a dog-hater?
  • hatter — a person who has become eccentric from living alone in a remote area.
  • hotter — to vibrate up and down; shake, totter, or rattle, as a plate on a shelf.
  • later — occurring, coming, or being after the usual or proper time: late frosts; a late spring.
  • latter — occurring, coming, or being after the usual or proper time: late frosts; a late spring.
  • cast one's lot with — one of a set of objects, as straws or pebbles, drawn or thrown from a container to decide a question or choice by chance.
  • matter — a dull or dead surface, often slightly roughened, as on metals, paint, paper, or glass.
  • natter — to talk incessantly; chatter.
  • otter — any of several aquatic, furbearing, weasellike mammals of the genus Lutra and related genera, having webbed feet and a long, slightly flattened tail.
  • pater — Latin. father of his country.
  • patter — to talk glibly or rapidly, especially with little regard to meaning; chatter.
  • plater — a person or thing that plates.
  • platter — a large, shallow dish, usually elliptical in shape, for holding and serving food, especially meat or fish.
  • plotter — a person or thing that plots.
  • potter — Beatrix [bee-uh-triks] /ˈbi ə trɪks/ (Show IPA), 1866–1943, English writer and illustrator of children's books.
  • prater — to talk excessively and pointlessly; babble: They prated on until I was ready to scream.
  • rater — a person who makes rates or ratings.
  • rotter — a thoroughly bad, worthless, or objectionable person.
  • scatter — to throw loosely about; distribute at irregular intervals: to scatter seeds.
  • shatter — to break (something) into pieces, as by a blow.
  • skater — a person who skates.
  • slaterSamuel, 1768–1835, U.S. industrialist, born in England.
  • smatter — to speak (a language, words, etc.) with superficial knowledge or understanding.
  • spatter — to scatter or dash in small particles or drops: The dog spattered mud on everyone when he shook himself.
  • splatter — an act or instance of splattering.
  • spotter — a person employed to remove spots from clothing, especially at a dry-cleaning establishment.
  • squatter — the act or fact of squatting.
  • stater — statistic.
  • straighter — without a bend, angle, or curve; not curved; direct: a straight path.
  • tatar — a member of a modern Turkic people living in the Tatar Autonomous Republic and adjacent regions of eastern European Russia and in widely scattered communities in western Siberia and central Asia.
  • tater — potato.
  • tatter — a person who does tatting, especially as an occupation.
  • totter — to walk or go with faltering steps, as if from extreme weakness.
  • traitor — a person who betrays another, a cause, or any trust.
  • trotter — an animal that trots, especially a horse bred and trained for harness racing.
  • vatter — a lake in S Sweden. 80 miles (130 km) long; 733 sq. mi. (1900 sq. km).
  • waiter — a person, especially a man, who waits on tables, as in a restaurant.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • back matter — the parts of a book, such as the index and appendices, that follow the main text
  • creator — The creator of something is the person who made it or invented it.
  • curator — A curator is someone who is in charge of the objects or works of art in a museum or art gallery.
  • debater — A debater is someone who takes part in debates.
  • decatur — Stephen. 1779–1820, US naval officer, noted for his raid on Tripoli harbour (1804) and his role in the War of 1812
  • deflator — (economics) A factor applied to economic statistics in order to counter the effect of inflation.
  • dictator — A dictator is a ruler who has complete power in a country, especially power which was obtained by force and is used unfairly or cruelly.
  • equator — An imaginary line drawn around the earth equally distant from both poles, dividing the earth into northern and southern hemispheres and constituting the parallel of latitude 0 °.
  • front matter — all material in a book that precedes the text proper, as the title page, copyright page, table of contents, dedication, and preface.
  • gray matter — Anatomy. nerve tissue, especially of the brain and spinal cord, that contains fibers and nerve cell bodies and is dark reddish-gray. Compare white matter.
  • grey matter — You can refer to your intelligence or your brains as grey matter.
  • head waiter — a person in charge of waiters, busboys, etc., in a restaurant or dining car.
  • inflator — to distend; swell or puff out; dilate: The king cobra inflates its hood.
  • lemaitre — Francois Élie Jules [frahn-swa ey-lee zhyl] /frɑ̃ˈswa eɪˈli ʒül/ (Show IPA), 1835–1915, French critic and dramatist.
  • mercator — Gerhardus [jer-hahr-duh s] /dʒərˈhɑr dəs/ (Show IPA), (Gerhard Kremer) 1512–94, Flemish cartographer and geographer.
  • no matter — the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed: the matter of which the earth is made.
  • saltwater — of or relating to salt water.
  • sea otter — a marine otter, Enhydra lutris, of the shores of the northern Pacific, with a very valuable fur: now greatly reduced in number and rare in many areas.
  • sea slater — a large (2.5 cm or 1 in.) nocturnal isopod, Ligea oceanica, that lives in cracks in rocks or walls around the high-water mark
  • the matter — the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed: the matter of which the earth is made.
  • translator — Also, translater. a person who translates.
  • viator — a wayfarer; traveler.
  • white matter — nerve tissue, especially of the brain and spinal cord, which primarily contains myelinated fibers and is nearly white in color. Compare gray matter (def 1).

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • amphitheater — An amphitheater is a large open area surrounded by rows of seats sloping upward. Amphitheaters were built mainly in Greek and Roman times for the performance of plays.
  • amphitheatre — An amphitheatre is a large open area surrounded by rows of seats sloping upwards. Amphitheatres were built mainly in Greek and Roman times for the performance of plays.
  • antimatter — In science, antimatter is a form of matter whose particles have characteristics and properties opposite to those of ordinary matter.
  • imprimatur — an official license to print or publish a book, pamphlet, etc., especially a license issued by a censor of the Roman Catholic Church. Compare nihil obstat.
  • river otter — a North American otter, Lutra canadensis, with brown and silver fur, native to streams and lakes in the U.S. and Canada.
  • spin the platter — a game in which one member of a group spins a platter on its edge and a designated member must catch it before it falls or pay a forfeit.
  • subject matter — the substance of a discussion, book, writing, etc., as distinguished from its form or style.
  • vindicator — to clear, as from an accusation, imputation, suspicion, or the like: to vindicate someone's honor.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • sooner or later — within a short period after this or that time, event, etc.: We shall know soon after he calls.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • celestial equator — the great circle lying on the celestial sphere, the plane of which is perpendicular to the line joining the north and south celestial poles
  • magnetic equator — aclinic line.
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