Rhymes with wilderness
wil·der·ness
W w Two-syllable rhymes
- blindness — unable to see; lacking the sense of sight; sightless: a blind man.
- builder — A builder is a person whose job is to build or repair houses and other buildings.
- business — Business is work relating to the production, buying, and selling of goods or services.
- careless — If you are careless, you do not pay enough attention to what you are doing, and so you make mistakes, or cause harm or damage.
- children — Children is the plural of child.
- coolness — moderately cold; neither warm nor cold: a rather cool evening.
- darkness — the state or quality of being dark: The room was in total darkness.
- ernest — Obsolete form of earnest.
- filter — any substance, as cloth, paper, porous porcelain, or a layer of charcoal or sand, through which liquid or gas is passed to remove suspended impurities or to recover solids.
- fitness — health.
- furnace — a structure or apparatus in which heat may be generated, as for heating houses, smelting ores, or producing steam.
- harness — the combination of straps, bands, and other parts forming the working gear of a draft animal. Compare yoke1 (def 1).
- illness — unhealthy condition; poor health; indisposition; sickness.
- kindness — the state or quality of being kind: kindness to animals.
- sadness — affected by unhappiness or grief; sorrowful or mournful: to feel sad because a close friend has moved away.
- wildness — living in a state of nature; not tamed or domesticated: a wild animal; wild geese.
- witness — to see, hear, or know by personal presence and perception: to witness an accident.
Three-syllable rhymes
- bewilder — If something bewilders you, it is so confusing or difficult that you cannot understand it.
- bitterness — having a harsh, disagreeably acrid taste, like that of aspirin, quinine, wormwood, or aloes.
- holiness — the quality or state of being holy; sanctity.
- humorous — Archaic. moist; wet.
- limitless — without limit; boundless: limitless ambition; limitless space.
- period — a rather large interval of time that is meaningful in the life of a person, in history, etc., because of its particular characteristics: a period of illness; a period of great profitability for a company; a period of social unrest in Germany.
- rigorous — characterized by rigor; rigidly severe or harsh, as people, rules, or discipline: rigorous laws.
- tenderness — soft or delicate in substance; not hard or tough: a tender steak.
- vigorous — full of or characterized by vigor: a vigorous effort.
Four-or-more syllable rhymes
- bewilderment — Bewilderment is the feeling of being bewildered.