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Rhymes with worn

worn
W w

One-syllable rhymes

  • born — When a baby is born, it comes out of its mother's body at the beginning of its life. In formal English, if you say that someone is born of someone or to someone, you mean that person is their parent.
  • borne — Borne is the past participle of bear1.
  • bourn — a destination; goal
  • bourne — a brook or rivulet.
  • corn — Corn is used to refer to crops such as wheat and barley. It can also be used to refer to the seeds from these plants.
  • doorn — a town in the central Netherlands, in Utrecht province: residence of Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany from his abdication (1919) until his death (1941)
  • dorn — A British ray; the thornback.
  • hornCape. Cape Horn.
  • horneLena, 1917–2010, U.S. singer and actress.
  • lorneFirth of, an inlet of the Atlantic Ocean, on the W coast of Scotland, leading NE to the Caledonian Canal.
  • morn — morning.
  • mourn — Feel or show deep sorrow or regret for (someone or their death), typically by following conventions such as the wearing of black clothes.
  • orn — (obsolete) To ornament; to adorn.
  • orne — a department in NW France. 2372 sq. mi. (6145 sq. km). Capital: Alençon.
  • porn — television shows, articles, photographs, etc., thought to cater to an excessive, irresistible desire for or interest in something: a magazine filled with enticing food porn; an addiction to real-estate porn.
  • scorn — open or unqualified contempt; disdain: His face and attitude showed the scorn he felt.
  • shorn — a past participle of shear.
  • sworn — past participle of swear.
  • thorn — German name of Toruń.
  • torn — past participle of tear2 .
  • warn — to give notice, advice, or intimation to (a person, group, etc.) of danger, impending evil, possible harm, or anything else unfavorable: They warned him of a plot against him. She was warned that her life was in danger.
  • warne — Shane (Keith). born 1969, Australian cricketer: a leg spinner, he took 708 wickets in 145 test matches (1992–2007)
  • zorn — Anders Leonhard [ahn-duh rs ley-aw-nahrd] /ˈɑn dərs ˈleɪ ɔˌnɑrd/ (Show IPA), 1860–1920, Swedish painter, etcher, and sculptor.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • aborn — Born, begotten, created, developed.
  • adorn — If something adorns a place or an object, it makes it look more beautiful.
  • bass horn — an obsolete wind instrument of low range
  • dent corn — a strain of Indian corn (Zea mays var. indentata) in which the mature kernel develops a slight depression at the tip
  • field corn — feed corn grown for stock.
  • firstborn — first in the order of birth; eldest.
  • flint corn — a variety of corn, Zea mays indurata, having very hard-skinned kernels not subject to shrinkage.
  • forewarn — to warn in advance.
  • forlorn — desolate or dreary; unhappy or miserable, as in feeling, condition, or appearance.
  • forsworn — past participle of forswear.
  • french horn — a musical brass wind instrument with a long, coiled tube having a conical bore and a flaring bell.
  • green corn — sweet corn (def 2).
  • lowborn — of humble birth.
  • post horn — a straight or coiled copper or brass horn with no valves or slide, originally used to announce mail coaches.
  • reborn — having undergone rebirth.
  • seed corn — ears or kernels of corn set apart as seed.
  • stillborn — dead when born.
  • sweet corn — any of several varieties of corn, especially Zea mays rugosa, the grain or kernels of which are sweet and suitable for eating.
  • unborn — not yet born; yet to come; future: unborn generations.
  • wellborn — born of a good, noble, or highly esteemed family.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • basset horn — an obsolete woodwind instrument of the clarinet family
  • candy corn — a small candy shaped and colored to look like a kernel of corn.
  • guinea corn — durra.
  • indian corn — corn1 (def 1).
  • powder horn — a powder flask made from the horn of a cow or ox.
  • squirrel corn — an American plant, Dicentra canadensis, of the fumitory family, having yellow roots resembling kernels of corn, finely dissected leaves, and clusters of drooping, heart-shaped, cream-colored flowers.
  • sugar corn — sweet corn.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

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