Rhymes with weave
weave
W w One-syllable rhymes
- cleave — To cleave something means to split or divide it into two separate parts, often violently.
- cleve — Per Teodor [par tey-aw-dawr] /pær ˈteɪ ɔˌdɔr/ (Show IPA), 1840–1905, Swedish chemist.
- eave — Usually, eaves. the overhanging lower edge of a roof.
- eve — Extensible VAX Editor
- greave — a piece of plate armor for the leg between the knee and the ankle, usually composed of front and back pieces.
- grieve — to feel grief or great sorrow: She has grieved over his death for nearly three years.
- heave — to raise or lift with effort or force; hoist: to heave a heavy ax.
- kleve — German name of Cleves.
- leave — to go out of or away from, as a place: to leave the house.
- naeve — (obsolete) A naevus; a pigmented spot.
- neve — granular snow accumulated on high mountains and subsequently compacted into glacial ice.
- peeve — to render peevish; annoy.
- sleeve — the part of a garment that covers the arm, varying in form and length but commonly tubular.
- steve — Stephen Norman ("Steve"; "Lefty") born 1944, U.S. baseball player.
- vive — long live; up with (a specified person or thing)
- we've — We've is the usual spoken form of 'we have', especially when 'have' is an auxiliary verb.
Two-syllable rhymes
- achieve — If you achieve a particular aim or effect, you succeed in doing it or causing it to happen, usually after a lot of effort.
- aggrieve — to grieve; distress; afflict
- aviv — the seventh month of the Jewish year, equivalent to Nisan of the modern Jewish calendar. Ex. 34:18.
- believe — If you believe that something is true, you think that it is true, but you are not sure.
- bereave — to deprive (of) something or someone valued, esp through death
- conceive — If you cannot conceive of something, you cannot imagine it or believe it.
- deceive — If you deceive someone, you make them believe something that is not true, usually in order to get some advantage for yourself.
- frost heave — an uplift in soil caused by the freezing of internal moisture.
- geneve — French name of Geneva.
- naive — having or showing unaffected simplicity of nature or absence of artificiality; unsophisticated; ingenuous.
- perceive — to become aware of, know, or identify by means of the senses: I perceived an object looming through the mist.
- qui vive — on the qui vive, on the alert; watchful: Special guards were on the qui vive for trespassers.
- reave — to take away by or as by force; plunder; rob.
- receive — to take into one's possession (something offered or delivered): to receive many gifts.
- reeve — to fasten by placing through or around something.
- relieve — to ease or alleviate (pain, distress, anxiety, need, etc.).
- reprieve — to delay the impending punishment or sentence of (a condemned person).
- retrieve — to recover or regain: to retrieve the stray ball.
- shore leave — permission to spend time ashore, usually 48 hours or more, granted a member of a ship's company.
- sick leave — leave from duty, work, or the like, granted because of illness.
Three-syllable rhymes
- christmas eve — Christmas Eve is the 24th of December, the day before Christmas Day.
- disbelieve — to have no belief in; refuse or reject belief in: to disbelieve reports of UFO sightings.
- dolman sleeve — a sleeve tapered from a very large armhole to fit closely at the wrist, used on women's garments.
- interleave — to provide blank leaves in (a book) for notes or written comments.
- interweave — to weave together, as threads, strands, branches, or roots.
- misconceive — Fail to understand correctly.
- misperceive — to understand or perceive incorrectly; misunderstand.
- new year's eve — the night of December 31, often celebrated with merrymaking to usher in the new year at midnight.
- preconceive — to form a conception or opinion of beforehand, as before seeing evidence or as a result of previously held prejudice.
- tel aviv — a city in W central Israel: one of the centers of Jewish immigration following World War II.
Four-or-more syllable rhymes
- midsummer eve — the evening preceding Midsummer Day: formerly believed to be a time when witches and other supernatural beings caused widespread mischief.
- on the qui vive — on the qui vive, on the alert; watchful: Special guards were on the qui vive for trespassers.
- terminal leave — the final leave granted to a member of the armed forces just before discharge, equal to the total unused leave accumulated during active service.