Rhymes with weekend
week·end
W w One-syllable rhymes
- bend — When you bend, you move the top part of your body downwards and forwards. Plants and trees also bend.
- blend — If you blend substances together or if they blend, you mix them together so that they become one substance.
- end — Come or bring to a final point; finish.
- friend — a person attached to another by feelings of affection or personal regard.
- lend — to grant the use of (something) on condition that it or its equivalent will be returned.
- mend — to make (something broken, worn, torn, or otherwise damaged) whole, sound, or usable by repairing: to mend old clothes; to mend a broken toy.
- send — to cause, permit, or enable to go: to send a messenger; They sent their son to college.
- spend — to pay out, disburse, or expend; dispose of (money, wealth, resources, etc.): resisting the temptation to spend one's money.
- tend — to attend by action, care, etc. (usually followed by to).
- trend — the general course or prevailing tendency; drift: trends in the teaching of foreign languages; the trend of events.
- wend — to pursue or direct (one's way).
Two-syllable rhymes
- beacon — A beacon is a light or a fire, usually on a hill or tower, which acts as a signal or a warning.
- bookend — Bookends are a pair of supports used to hold a row of books in an upright position by placing one at each end of the row.
- boyfriend — Someone's boyfriend is a man or boy with whom they are having a romantic or sexual relationship.
- decent — Decent is used to describe something which is considered to be of an acceptable standard or quality.
- deepen — If a situation or emotion deepens or if something deepens it, it becomes stronger and more intense.
- deepened — Simple past tense and past participle of deepen.
- defend — If you defend someone or something, you take action in order to protect them.
- demon — A demon is an evil spirit.
- depend — If you say that one thing depends on another, you mean that the first thing will be affected or determined by the second.
- even — Flat and smooth.
- freaking — a fleck or streak of color.
- leaking — Present participle of leak.
- peeking — to look or glance quickly or furtively, especially through a small opening or from a concealed location; peep; peer.
- pretend — to cause or attempt to cause (what is not so) to seem so: to pretend illness; to pretend that nothing is wrong.
- reason — a basis or cause, as for some belief, action, fact, event, etc.: the reason for declaring war.
- season — one of the four periods of the year (spring, summer, autumn, and winter), beginning astronomically at an equinox or solstice, but geographically at different dates in different climates.
- seeking — to go in search or quest of: to seek the truth.
- sequence — the following of one thing after another; succession.
- sneaking — acting in a furtive or underhand way.
- speaking — the act, utterance, or discourse of a person who speaks.
- streaking — a long, narrow mark, smear, band of color, or the like: streaks of mud.
- tweaking — to pinch and pull with a jerk and twist: to tweak someone's ear; to tweak someone's nose.
- weaken — to make weak or weaker.
- weakened — to make weak or weaker.
- weakens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of weaken.
- weekends — every weekend; on or during weekends: We go fishing weekends.