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Rhymes with narrow

nar·row
N n

Two-syllable rhymes

  • aero — of or relating to aircraft or aeronautics
  • arrow — An arrow is a written or printed sign that consists of a straight line with another line bent at a sharp angle at one end. This is a printed arrow: →. The arrow points in a particular direction to indicate where something is.
  • barrow — A barrow is the same as a wheelbarrow.
  • carrow — A strolling gamester in Ireland.
  • cerro — a hill or peak.
  • darrow — Clarence (Seward)1857-1938; U.S. lawyer
  • faro — a seaport in S Portugal.
  • harrow — a borough of Greater London, in SE England.
  • herro — Eye dialect of hello, representing Oriental.
  • marrow — a partner; fellow worker.
  • merrow — A merman or mermaid in Scottish and Irish Gaelic folklore.
  • pharaoh — a title of an ancient Egyptian king.
  • sparrow — any of numerous American finches of the family Emberizinae. Compare chipping sparrow, song sparrow.
  • taro — a stemless plant, Colocasia esculenta, of the arum family, cultivated in tropical regions, in the Pacific islands and elsewhere, for the edible tuber.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • amero — A proposed unified currency of Canada, the United States, and Mexico.
  • bolero — A bolero is a very short jacket, sometimes without sleeves. Boleros are worn mainly by women.
  • bone marrow — Bone marrow is the soft fatty substance inside human or animal bones.
  • bracero — a Mexican labourer working in the USA, esp one admitted into the country to relieve labour shortages during and immediately after World War II
  • broad arrow — a mark shaped like a broad arrowhead designating British government property and formerly used on prison clothing
  • disc harrow — a harrow with sharp-edged slightly concave discs mounted on horizontal shafts and used to cut clods or debris on the surface of the soil or to cover seed after planting
  • disk harrow — a harrow having a number of sharp-edged, concave disks set at such an angle that as the harrow is drawn along the ground they turn the soil, pulverize it, and destroy weeds.
  • ferrero — Guglielmo [goo-lyel-maw] /guˈlyɛl mɔ/ (Show IPA), 1871–1942, Italian historian and sociologist.
  • field sparrow — a common North American finch, Spizella pusilla, found in brushy pasturelands.
  • guerrero — a state in S Mexico. 24,885 sq. mi. (64,452 sq. km). Capital: Chilpancingo.
  • hedge sparrow — the dunnock.
  • house sparrow — a small, hardy, buffy-brown and gray bird, Passer domesticus, of Europe, introduced into America, Australia, etc.
  • madero — Francisco Indalecio [frahn-sees-kaw een-dah-le-syaw] /frɑnˈsis kɔ ˌin dɑˈlɛ syɔ/ (Show IPA), 1873–1913, Mexican revolutionary and political leader: president 1911–13.
  • montero — a Spanish hunter's cap, round in shape and having an earflap.
  • pineroSir Arthur Wing, 1855–1934, English playwright and actor.
  • quintero — Álvarez Quintero.
  • ranchero — a rancher.
  • sombrero — a broad-brimmed hat of straw or felt, usually tall-crowned, worn especially in Spain, Mexico, and the southwestern U.S.
  • song sparrow — a small emberizine songbird, Melospiza melodia, common in North America.
  • straight arrow — a person who manifests high-minded devotion to clean living and moral righteousness.
  • swamp sparrow — a North American sparrow, Melospiza georgiana, inhabiting marshy areas.
  • tree sparrow — a Eurasian bird, Passer montanus, related to but smaller than the house sparrow.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • caballero — a Spanish gentleman
  • chipping sparrow — a common North American sparrow, Spizella passerina, having brown-and-grey plumage and a white eye stripe
  • companero — (in the southwestern U.S.) a male companion or partner.
  • mescalero — a member of a group of Apache Indians who originally inhabited northern Mexico and the southwestern U.S. east of the Rio Grande, have intermarried with the Chiricahua and Lipan, and are presently situated in New Mexico.
  • vesper sparrow — a common finch, Pooecetes gramineus, of fields and pastures in North America, noted for its evening song.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

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