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Rhymes with wickedness

wick·ed·ness
W w

One-syllable rhymes

  • wicked — evil or morally bad in principle or practice; sinful; iniquitous: wicked people; wicked habits.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • badness — not good in any manner or degree.
  • business — Business is work relating to the production, buying, and selling of goods or services.
  • kicking — A punishment or assault in which the victim is kicked repeatedly.
  • sadness — affected by unhappiness or grief; sorrowful or mournful: to feel sad because a close friend has moved away.
  • sickness — a particular disease or malady.
  • weakness — the state or quality of being weak; lack of strength, firmness, vigor, or the like; feebleness.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • crookedness — The state of being crooked.
  • diligence — constant and earnest effort to accomplish what is undertaken; persistent exertion of body or mind.
  • dissonance — inharmonious or harsh sound; discord; cacophony.
  • fickleness — Changeability, especially as regards one's loyalties or affections.
  • forgiveness — act of forgiving; state of being forgiven.
  • frictionless — surface resistance to relative motion, as of a body sliding or rolling.
  • frivolous — characterized by lack of seriousness or sense: frivolous conduct.
  • immanence — remaining within; indwelling; inherent.
  • imminence — Also, imminency. the state or condition of being imminent or impending: the imminence of war.
  • impetus — a moving force; impulse; stimulus: The grant for building the opera house gave impetus to the city's cultural life.
  • impotence — the condition or quality of being impotent; weakness.
  • incidence — the rate or range of occurrence or influence of something, especially of something unwanted: the high incidence of heart disease in men over 40.
  • infamous — having an extremely bad reputation: an infamous city.
  • innocence — the quality or state of being innocent; freedom from sin or moral wrong.
  • insolence — contemptuously rude or impertinent behavior or speech.
  • instruments — Plural form of instrument.
  • ligaments — Plural form of ligament.
  • limitless — without limit; boundless: limitless ambition; limitless space.
  • mischievous — maliciously or playfully annoying.
  • nicholas — (Thomas Parentucelli) 1397?–1455, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1447–55.
  • righteousness — the quality or state of being righteous.
  • stimulus — something that incites to action or exertion or quickens action, feeling, thought, etc.: The approval of others is a potent stimulus.
  • syllabus — an outline or other brief statement of the main points of a discourse, the subjects of a course of lectures, the contents of a curriculum, etc.
  • synthesis — the combining of the constituent elements of separate material or abstract entities into a single or unified entity (opposed to analysis, ) the separating of any material or abstract entity into its constituent elements.
  • syphilis — a chronic infectious disease, caused by a spirochete, Treponema pallidum, usually venereal in origin but often congenital, and affecting almost any organ or tissue in the body, especially the genitals, skin, mucous membranes, aorta, brain, liver, bones, and nerves.
  • vigilance — state or quality of being vigilant; watchfulness: Vigilance is required in the event of treachery.
  • villainous — having a cruel, wicked, malicious nature or character.
  • vividness — strikingly bright or intense, as color, light, etc.: a vivid green.
  • wickedly — evil or morally bad in principle or practice; sinful; iniquitous: wicked people; wicked habits.
  • wistfulness — characterized by melancholy; longing; yearning.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • ambivalence — the simultaneous existence of two opposed and conflicting attitudes, emotions, etc
  • antithesis — The antithesis of something is its exact opposite.
  • asynchronous — An asynchronous electric machine is one in which the magnetic field and the rotation are not exactly the same.
  • equivalence — The condition of being equal or equivalent in value, worth, function, etc.
  • felicitous — well-suited for the occasion, as an action, manner, or expression; apt; appropriate: The chairman's felicitous anecdote set everyone at ease.
  • indigenous — originating in and characteristic of a particular region or country; native (often followed by to): the plants indigenous to Canada; the indigenous peoples of southern Africa.
  • leviticus — the third book of the Bible, containing laws relating to the priests and Levites and to the forms of Jewish ceremonial observance. Abbreviation: Lev.
  • meticulous — taking or showing extreme care about minute details; precise; thorough: a meticulous craftsman; meticulous personal appearance.
  • omnipotence — the quality or state of being omnipotent.
  • polygamous — of, pertaining to, characterized by, or practicing polygamy; polygamic.
  • polygynous — of, pertaining to, characterized by, or practicing polygyny.
  • ridiculous — causing or worthy of ridicule or derision; absurd; preposterous; laughable: a ridiculous plan.
  • saint nicholasSaint ("Nicholas the Great") died a.d. 867, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 858–867.
  • solicitous — anxious or concerned (usually followed by about, for, etc., or a clause): solicitous about a person's health.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • angle of incidence — the angle that a line or beam of radiation makes with the normal to the surface at the point of incidence
  • unambiguous — not ambiguous, or unclear; distinct; unequivocal: The object of the experiment was to reach an unambiguous conclusion about climate change.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • australopithecus — an extinct genus of small-brained,large-toothed bipedal hominids that lived in Africa between one and four million years ago.
  • conditioned stimulus — a stimulus to which an organism has learned to make a response by classical conditioning
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