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Rhymes with zoom

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Three-syllable rhymes

  • cutting room — The cutting room in a film production company is the place where the film is edited.
  • dining room — a room in which meals are eaten, as in a home or hotel, especially the room in which the major or more formal meals are eaten.
  • drawing room — a formal reception room, especially in an apartment or private house.
  • dressing room — a room for use in getting dressed, especially one for performers backstage in a theater, television studio, etc.
  • ladies' room — a public lavatory for women.
  • living room — a room in a home used, especially by a family, for leisure activities, entertaining guests, etc.; parlor.
  • lumber room — a room in a house used for storing odds-and-ends, especially old furniture.
  • nom de plume — pen name.
  • powder room — a room containing a toilet and washing facilities for women; lavatory.
  • reading room — a room set aside for reading, as in a library or club.
  • reassume — to take for granted or without proof: to assume that everyone wants peace. Synonyms: suppose, presuppose; postulate, posit.
  • shipping room — a place in a business concern where goods are packed and shipped.
  • sitting room — a small living room, often one that forms part of a suite in a hotel, private house, etc.
  • smoking room — a room set apart for smoking, as in a hotel or clubhouse.
  • sonic boom — a loud noise caused by the shock wave generated by an aircraft moving at supersonic speed.
  • spanish broom — a spiny, often leafless shrub, Genista hispanica, of the legume family, native to southern Europe, having clustered, golden-yellow flowers and hairy pods.
  • standing room — space in which to stand, as in a theater, stadium, or the like.
  • waiting room — a room for the use of persons waiting, as in a railroad station or a physician's office.
  • baby boom — A baby boom is a period of time when a lot of babies are born in a particular place.
  • billiard room — a room in a house, club, etc., where billiards is played.
  • common room — A common room is a room in a university or school where people can sit, talk, and relax.
  • control room — a room from which a system, network, or piece of equipment is controlled

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • bathing costume — A bathing costume is a piece of clothing that is worn for swimming, especially by women and girls.
  • family room — a room in a house used as a center for family activities.
  • reception room — a room for receiving visitors, clients, patients, etc.
  • recreation room — (in a home or public building) a room for informal entertaining, as for dancing, games, cards, etc.
  • swimming costume — A swimming costume is the same as a swimsuit.
  • withdrawing room — a room to withdraw or retire to; drawing room.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • operating room — a specially equipped room, usually in a hospital, where surgical procedures are performed. Abbreviation: OR.
  • recovery room — a room near the operating or delivery room of a hospital, equipped with specific apparatus and staffed by specially trained personnel for emergencies, used for the recovery from anesthesia of a postoperative or obstetrical patient before being brought to a hospital room or ward.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • academic costume — the ceremonial garb of the students and faculty in schools, colleges, and universities, consisting of a flat cap (mortarboard), a long, wide-sleeved gown, and sometimes a hood, worn especially at commencement exercises.

One-syllable rhymes

  • bloom — A bloom is the flower on a plant.
  • blue — Something that is blue is the colour of the sky on a sunny day.
  • blum — Léon (leɔ̃). 1872–1950, French socialist statesman; premier of France (1936–37; 1938; 1946–47)
  • blumeJudy, born 1938, U.S. novelist.
  • boo — If you boo a speaker or performer, you shout 'boo' or make other loud sounds to indicate that you do not like them, their opinions, or their performance.
  • boom — If there is a boom in the economy, there is an increase in economic activity, for example in the amount of things that are being bought and sold.
  • boot — Boots are shoes that cover your whole foot and the lower part of your leg.
  • broom — A broom is a kind of brush with a long handle. You use a broom for sweeping the floor.
  • cool — Something that is cool has a temperature which is low but not very low.
  • do — Informal. a burst of frenzied activity; action; commotion.
  • doom — fate or destiny, especially adverse fate; unavoidable ill fortune: In exile and poverty, he met his doom.
  • dune — a sand hill or sand ridge formed by the wind, usually in desert regions or near lakes and oceans.
  • flume — a deep narrow defile containing a mountain stream or torrent.
  • food — any nourishing substance that is eaten, drunk, or otherwise taken into the body to sustain life, provide energy, promote growth, etc.
  • fool — to trick, deceive, or impose on: They tried to fool him.
  • fume — of food, cured or flavored by exposure to smoke; smoked.
  • fumes — Often, fumes. any smokelike or vaporous exhalation from matter or substances, especially of an odorous or harmful nature: tobacco fumes; noxious fumes of carbon monoxide.
  • gloom — total or partial darkness; dimness.
  • glume — one of the characteristic chafflike bracts of the inflorescence of grasses, sedges, etc., especially one of the pair of bracts at the base of a spikelet.
  • groom — a bridegroom.
  • grume — blood when viscous.
  • homeLord, Douglas-Home.
  • humeDavid, 1711–76, Scottish philosopher and historian.
  • june — the sixth month of the year, containing 30 days. Abbreviation: Jun.
  • loom — loon1 .
  • loon — a crazy or simple-minded person.
  • lose — to come to be without (something in one's possession or care), through accident, theft, etc., so that there is little or no prospect of recovery: I'm sure I've merely misplaced my hat, not lost it.
  • mood — Grammar. a set of categories for which the verb is inflected in many languages, and that is typically used to indicate the syntactic relation of the clause in which the verb occurs to other clauses in the sentence, or the attitude of the speaker toward what he or she is saying, as certainty or uncertainty, wish or command, emphasis or hesitancy. a set of syntactic devices in some languages that is similar to this set in function or meaning, involving the use of auxiliary words, as can, may, might. any of the categories of these sets: the Latin indicative, imperative, and subjunctive moods.
  • moonSun Myung [suhn myuhng] /sʌn myʌŋ/ (Show IPA), 1920–2012, Korean religious leader: founder of the Unification Church.
  • move — to pass from one place or position to another.
  • new — other than the former or the old: a new era; in the New World.
  • noon — midday.
  • plume — a feather.
  • pool — Also called pocket billiards. any of various games played on a pool table with a cue ball and 15 other balls that are usually numbered, in which the object is to drive all the balls into the pockets with the cue ball.
  • poop — party pooper.
  • rheum — a thin discharge of the mucous membranes, especially during a cold.
  • roof — the external upper covering of a house or other building.
  • room — channel
  • rune — a poem, song, or verse.
  • school — a large number of fish, porpoises, whales, or the like, feeding or migrating together.
  • shoe — an external covering for the human foot, usually of leather and consisting of a more or less stiff or heavy sole and a lighter upper part ending a short distance above, at, or below the ankle.
  • shoot — to hit, wound, damage, kill, or destroy with a missile discharged from a weapon.
  • soon — within a short period after this or that time, event, etc.: We shall know soon after he calls.
  • spoon — a utensil for use in eating, stirring, measuring, ladling, etc., consisting of a small, shallow bowl with a handle.
  • spume — to eject or discharge as or like foam or froth; spew (often followed by forth).
  • to — (used for expressing motion or direction toward a point, person, place, or thing approached and reached, as opposed to from): They came to the house.
  • tomb — an excavation in earth or rock for the burial of a corpse; grave.
  • too — in addition; also; furthermore; moreover: young, clever, and rich too.
  • toon — (sometimes initial capital letter) a character in an animated cartoon.
  • true — being in accordance with the actual state or conditions; conforming to reality or fact; not false: a true story.
  • tuneThomas James ("Tommy") born 1939, U.S. dancer, choreographer, actor, singer, and director.
  • two — a cardinal number, 1 plus 1.
  • view — an instance of seeing or beholding; visual inspection.
  • vroom — the roaring sound made by a motor at high speed.
  • whoas who should say, Archaic. in a manner of speaking; so to say.
  • whomas who should say, Archaic. in a manner of speaking; so to say.
  • womb — the uterus of the human female and certain higher mammals.
  • zoo — Berkeley Yacc

Two-syllable rhymes

  • abloom — in flower; blooming
  • assume — If you assume that something is true, you imagine that it is true, sometimes wrongly.
  • back room — a place where research or planning is done, esp secret research in wartime
  • balloon — A balloon is a small, thin, rubber bag that you blow air into so that it becomes larger and rounder or longer. Balloons are used as toys or decorations.
  • cartoon — A cartoon is a humorous drawing or series of drawings in a newspaper or magazine.
  • chat room — A chat room is a site on the Internet where people can exchange messages about a particular subject.
  • clean room — an environment, typically used in manufacturing or scientific research, in which environmental contaminants are kept to an absolute minimum
  • consume — If you consume something, you eat or drink it.
  • coombe — combe.
  • costume — An actor's or performer's costume is the set of clothes they wear while they are performing.
  • entomb — Place (a dead body) in a tomb.
  • exhume — Dig out (something buried, especially a corpse) from the ground.
  • front room — a room at the front of a house, especially a parlor.
  • game room — a room used for recreation, especially for table games.
  • gun room — a room in which guns are kept.
  • kaboom — Used to represent the sound of a loud explosion.
  • khartoum — a region in N Africa, S of the Sahara and Libyan deserts, extending from the Atlantic to the Red Sea.
  • legroom — space sufficient for keeping one's legs in a comfortable position, as in an automobile.
  • men's room — a public lavatory for men.
  • perfume — a substance, extract, or preparation for diffusing or imparting an agreeable or attractive smell, especially a fluid containing fragrant natural oils extracted from flowers, woods, etc., or similar synthetic oils.
  • presume — to take for granted, assume, or suppose: I presume you're tired after your drive.
  • pump room — a room at a spa for drinking mineral waters.
  • push broom — a wide broom with a long handle, pushed by hand and used for sweeping large areas.
  • rec room — a recreation room.
  • resume — a summing up; summary.
  • scotch broom — the broom, Cytisus scoparius.
  • sea room — unobstructed space at sea in which a vessel can be easily maneuvered or navigated.
  • steam room — a steam-filled and heated room to induce sweating, as in a Turkish bath.
  • still room — (in a large house) a room for distilling or for the preparation of special foods and drinks.
  • white room — a room from which all contaminants have been eliminated and in which temperature, humidity, and pressure are controlled: used for assembly and repair of precision mechanisms, in preventing infection, etc.
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