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Rhymes with mire

mire
M m

Two-syllable rhymes

  • higher — having a great or considerable extent or reach upward or vertically; lofty; tall: a high wall.
  • high wire — a tightrope stretched very high above the ground.
  • hyer — Obsolete spelling of higher.
  • inquire — to seek information by questioning; ask: to inquire about a person.
  • inspire — to fill with an animating, quickening, or exalting influence: His courage inspired his followers.
  • liar — MIT Scheme
  • live wire — an energetic, keenly alert person.
  • meierRichard, born 1934, U.S. architect.
  • meyerAdolf, 1866–1950, U.S. psychiatrist, born in Switzerland.
  • misfire — (of a rifle or gun or of a bullet or shell) to fail to fire or explode.
  • on fire — 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.
  • perspire — to secrete a salty, watery fluid from the sweat glands of the skin, especially when very warm as a result of strenuous exertion; sweat.
  • plierpliers, (sometimes used with a singular verb) small pincers with long jaws, for bending wire, holding small objects, etc. (usually used with pair of).
  • prior — preceding in time or in order; earlier or former; previous: A prior agreement prevents me from accepting this.
  • pryer — a person who pries; a curious or inquisitive person.
  • red fire — any of various combustible preparations, as one containing strontium nitrate, that burn with a vivid red light: used chiefly in pyrotechnic displays and in signaling.
  • rehire — to engage the services of (a person or persons) for wages or other payment: to hire a clerk.
  • require — to have need of; need: He requires medical care.
  • retire — a movement in which the dancer brings one foot to the knee of the supporting leg and then returns it to the fifth position.
  • rewire — to provide with new wiring: to rewire a house.
  • shier — bashful; retiring.
  • skier — a person who skis.
  • snow tire — an automobile tire with a deep tread or protruding studs to give increased traction on snow or ice.
  • town crier — (formerly) a person employed by a town to make public announcements or proclamations, usually by shouting in the streets.
  • transpire — to occur; happen; take place.
  • watch fire — a fire maintained during the night as a signal and for providing light and warmth for guards.
  • white friar — a Carmelite friar: so called from the distinctive white cloak worn by the order.
  • acquire — If you acquire something, you buy or obtain it for yourself, or someone gives it to you.
  • admire — If you admire someone or something, you like and respect them very much.
  • afire — If something is afire or is set afire, it is on fire or looks as if it is on fire.
  • aspire — If you aspire to something such as an important job, you have a strong desire to achieve it.
  • attire — Your attire is the clothes you are wearing.
  • ayer — Sir Alfred Jules. 1910–89, English positivist philosopher, noted particularly for his antimetaphysical work Language, Truth, and Logic (1936)
  • barbed wire — Barbed wire is strong wire with sharp points sticking out of it, and is used to make fences.
  • black friar — a Dominican friar
  • briar — A briar is a wild rose with long, prickly stems.
  • buyer — A buyer is a person who is buying something or who intends to buy it.
  • byer — Sports. in a tournament, the preferential status of a player or team not paired with a competitor in an early round and thus automatically advanced to play in the next round: The top three seeded players received byes in the first round.
  • catch fire — to ignite
  • ceasefire — A ceasefire is an arrangement in which countries or groups of people that are fighting each other agree to stop fighting.
  • cease-fire — a temporary cessation of warfare by mutual agreement of the participants; truce
  • conspire — If two or more people or groups conspire to do something illegal or harmful, they make a secret agreement to do it.
  • cross wire — cross hair (def 1).
  • crown fire — a forest fire that spreads along treetops, often at great speeds.
  • cryer — Archaic form of crier.
  • desire — A desire is a strong wish to do or have something.
  • drier — a person or thing that dries.
  • dryer — Also, drier. a machine, appliance, or apparatus for removing moisture, as by forced ventilation or heat: hair dryer; clothes dryer.
  • dyerJohn, 1700–58, British poet.
  • enquire — (intransitive) To make an enquiry.
  • entire — An uncastrated male horse.
  • expire — (of a document, authorization, or agreement) cease to be valid, typically after a fixed period of time.
  • eyer — One who eyes another.
  • flat tire — a pneumatic tire that has lost all or most of its air through leakage, puncture, or the like.
  • flier — something that flies, as a bird or insect.
  • flyer — something that flies, as a bird or insect.
  • friar — Roman Catholic Church. a member of a religious order, especially the mendicant orders of Franciscans, Dominicans, Carmelites, and Augustinians.
  • frier — a person or thing that fries.
  • fryer — a person or thing that fries.
  • gray friar — a Franciscan friar: so called from the traditional color of the habit worn by the order.
  • greek fire — an incendiary mixture of unknown composition, used in warfare in medieval times by Byzantine Greeks.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • austin friar — one of the Hermits of St. Augustine.
  • ball of fire — a very lively person
  • line of fire — the straight horizontal line from the muzzle of a weapon in the direction of the axis of the bore, just prior to firing.
  • open fire — start shooting
  • piano wire — a very thin steel wire of high tensile strength.
  • radial tire — a motor-vehicle tire in which the plies or cords run from one bead to the other at right angles to both beads.
  • reacquire — to come into possession or ownership of; get as one's own: to acquire property.
  • set on fire — 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.
  • supplier — to furnish or provide (a person, establishment, place, etc.) with what is lacking or requisite: to supply someone clothing; to supply a community with electricity.
  • under fire — 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.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • covering fire — firing intended to protect an individual or formation making a movement by forcing the enemy to take cover
  • pneumatic tyre — a rubber tyre filled with air under pressure, used esp on motor vehicles

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • saint anthony's fire — any of certain skin conditions that are of an inflammatory or gangrenous nature, as erysipelas, hospital gangrene, or ergotism.

One-syllable rhymes

  • brier — any of various thorny shrubs or other plants, such as the sweetbrier and greenbrier
  • choir — A choir is a group of people who sing together, for example in a church or school.
  • crier — a person or animal that cries
  • dire — causing or involving great fear or suffering; dreadful; terrible: a dire calamity.
  • eir — (neologism) Belonging to em, their (singular). non-gloss definition Gender-neutral third-person singular possessive adjective, coordinate with 'his' and 'her'.
  • fire — combustion
  • gire — Obsolete form of gyre.
  • hire — to engage the services of (a person or persons) for wages or other payment: to hire a clerk.
  • ire — intense anger; wrath.
  • lyre — a musical instrument of ancient Greece consisting of a soundbox made typically from a turtle shell, with two curved arms connected by a yoke from which strings are stretched to the body, used especially to accompany singing and recitation.
  • prier — a person who pries; a curious or inquisitive person.
  • pyre — a pile or heap of wood or other combustible material.
  • quire — a set of 24 uniform sheets of paper.
  • shire — a river in SE Africa, flowing S from Lake Malawi to the Zambezi River. 370 miles (596 km) long.
  • sire — the male parent of a quadruped.
  • spier — a person who spies, watches, or discovers.
  • spire — a coil or spiral.
  • squire — (in England) a country gentleman, especially the chief landed proprietor in a district.
  • tire — Archaic. to dress (the head or hair), especially with a headdress.
  • trier — a city in W Germany, on the Moselle River: extensive Roman ruins; cathedral.
  • tyre — to furnish with tires.
  • 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.
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