0%

Rhymes with raccoon

rac·coon
R r

One-syllable rhymes

  • boon — You can describe something as a boon when it makes life better or easier for someone.
  • boone — Daniel. 1734–1820, American pioneer, explorer, and guide, esp in Kentucky
  • broun — (Matthew) Heywood (Campbell) 1888–1939, U.S. journalist, essayist, and novelist.
  • choon — a piece of recorded music that one likes
  • croon — If you croon, you sing or hum quietly and gently.
  • dune — a sand hill or sand ridge formed by the wind, usually in desert regions or near lakes and oceans.
  • goon — Informal. a hired hoodlum or thug.
  • hewn — felled and roughly shaped by hewing: hewn logs.
  • hoon — (Australia, slang, dated) A pimp.
  • june — the sixth month of the year, containing 30 days. Abbreviation: Jun.
  • kroon — an aluminum bronze coin and monetary unit of Estonia from 1928 to 1940 and from 1992 to 2010, when it was replaced by the euro, equal to 100 marks or senti.
  • kuhnMargaret ("Maggie") 1905–95, U.S. activist: a founder of the Gray Panthers.
  • loon — a crazy or simple-minded person.
  • moonSun Myung [suhn myuhng] /sʌn myʌŋ/ (Show IPA), 1920–2012, Korean religious leader: founder of the Unification Church.
  • moone — Obsolete spelling of moon.
  • noon — midday.
  • poon — any of several East Indian trees of the genus Calophyllum, that yield a light, hard wood used for masts, spars, etc.
  • prune — a variety of plum that dries without spoiling.
  • rune — a poem, song, or verse.
  • soon — within a short period after this or that time, event, etc.: We shall know soon after he calls.
  • spoon — a utensil for use in eating, stirring, measuring, ladling, etc., consisting of a small, shallow bowl with a handle.
  • strewn — to let fall in separate pieces or particles over a surface; scatter or sprinkle: to strew seed in a garden bed.
  • swoon — to faint; lose consciousness.
  • toon — (sometimes initial capital letter) a character in an animated cartoon.
  • tuneThomas James ("Tommy") born 1939, U.S. dancer, choreographer, actor, singer, and director.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • attune — to adjust or accustom (a person or thing); acclimatize
  • baboon — A baboon is a large monkey that lives in Africa.
  • balloon — A balloon is a small, thin, rubber bag that you blow air into so that it becomes larger and rounder or longer. Balloons are used as toys or decorations.
  • bassoon — A bassoon is a large musical instrument of the woodwind family that is shaped like a tube and played by blowing into a curved metal pipe.
  • bethune — Norman. 1890–1939, Canadian physician and campaigner for socialized medicine; pioneered the use of mobile medical units during the Spanish Civil War and in China during the second Sino-Japanese War
  • blue moon — If you say that something happens once in a blue moon, you are emphasizing that it does not happen very often at all.
  • buffoon — If you call someone a buffoon, you mean that they often do foolish things.
  • calhoun — John Caldwell1782-1850; U.S. statesman: vice president (1825-32)
  • cancun — a coastal resort in SE Mexico on the Yucatán Peninsula. Pop: 457 000 (2004 est)
  • cardoon — a thistle-like S European plant, Cynara cardunculus, closely related to the artichoke, with spiny leaves, purple flowers, and a leafstalk that may be blanched and eaten: family Asteraceae (composites)
  • cartoon — A cartoon is a humorous drawing or series of drawings in a newspaper or magazine.
  • cocoon — A cocoon is a covering of silky threads that the larvae of moths and other insects make for themselves before they grow into adults.
  • commune — A commune is a group of people who live together and share everything.
  • coon — A coon is a raccoon.
  • festoon — a string or chain of flowers, foliage, ribbon, etc., suspended in a curve between two points.
  • full moon — the moon when the whole of its disk is illuminated, occurring when in opposition to the sun.
  • galloon — a braid or trimming of worsted, silk or rayon tinsel, gold or silver, etc., usually having scalloping along both edges.
  • harpoon — a barbed, spearlike missile attached to a rope, and thrown by hand or shot from a gun, used for killing and capturing whales and large fish.
  • high noon — the exact moment of noon.
  • immune — protected from a disease or the like, as by inoculation.
  • impugn — to challenge as false (another's statements, motives, etc.); cast doubt upon.
  • karun — a river in SW Iran, flowing SW to the Shatt-al-Arab. About 515 miles (830 km) long.
  • lagoon — an area of shallow water separated from the sea by low sandy dunes. Compare laguna.
  • lampoon — a sharp, often virulent satire directed against an individual or institution; a work of literature, art, or the like, ridiculing severely the character or behavior of a person, society, etc.
  • maroon — dark brownish-red.
  • mattoon — a city in E Illinois.
  • monsoon — the seasonal wind of the Indian Ocean and southern Asia, blowing from the southwest in summer and from the northeast in winter.
  • muldoonRobert David, 1921–92, New Zealand political leader: prime minister 1975–84.
  • new moon — the moon either when in conjunction with the sun or soon after, being either invisible or visible only as a slender crescent.
  • noone — Nonstandard spelling of no one.
  • platoon — a military unit consisting of two or more squads or sections and a headquarters.
  • pontoon — the card game twenty-one.
  • rangoon — former name of Yangon.
  • saloon — a place for the sale and consumption of alcoholic drinks.
  • sassoon — Siegfried (Loraine) [seeg-freed law-reyn,, loh-] /ˈsig frid lɔˈreɪn,, loʊ-/ (Show IPA), 1886–1967, English poet and novelist.
  • terhune — Albert Payson [pey-suh n] /ˈpeɪ sən/ (Show IPA), 1872–1942, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
  • tycoon — a person of great wealth, influence, or power; magnate: a business tycoon; a political tycoon.
  • typhoon — a tropical cyclone or hurricane of the western Pacific area and the China seas.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • afternoon — The afternoon is the part of each day which begins at lunchtime and ends at about six o'clock.
  • daniel booneDaniel, 1734–1820, American pioneer, especially in Kentucky.
  • double bassoon — a bassoon an octave lower in pitch than the ordinary bassoon: the largest and deepest-toned instrument of the oboe class; contrabassoon.
  • ducommun — Élie [ey-lee] /eɪˈli/ (Show IPA), 1833–1906, Swiss author: Nobel Peace Prize 1902.
  • greasy spoon — a cheap and rather unsanitary restaurant.
  • harvest moon — the moon at and about the period of fullness that is nearest to the autumnal equinox.
  • opportune — appropriate, favorable, or suitable: an opportune phrase for the occasion.
  • picayune — of little value or account; small; trifling: a picayune amount.
  • silver spoon — spoon (def 16).
  • sugar spoon — a small spoon for serving granulated sugar, resembling but having a wider bowl than a teaspoon.
  • trial balloon — a statement, program, or the like issued publicly as a means of determining reactions in advance: The speech was a trial balloon for a new law.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • barrage balloon — Barrage balloons are large balloons which are fixed to the ground by strong steel cables. They are used in wartime, when the cables are intended to destroy low-flying enemy aircraft.
  • contrabassoon — the largest instrument in the oboe family, pitched an octave below the bassoon; double bassoon
  • good afternoon — greeting
  • inopportune — not opportune; inappropriate; inconvenient; untimely or unseasonable: an inopportune visit.
  • pilot balloon — a balloon for the visual observation of upper-atmosphere wind currents.
  • signature tune — theme song (def 2).

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • animated cartoon — a film produced by photographing a series of gradually changing drawings, etc, which give the illusion of movement when the series is projected rapidly
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?