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Rhymes with bass

bass
B b

One-syllable rhymes

  • place — a particular portion of space, whether of definite or indefinite extent.
  • raceCape, a cape at the SE extremity of Newfoundland.
  • rais — Redundant Array of Inexpensive Servers
  • ras — a sun god of Heliopolis, a universal creator worshiped throughout Egypt (typically represented as a hawk-headed man bearing on his head the solar disk and the uraeus).
  • sas — 1.   (language)   Statistical Analysis System. 2.   (tool)   SAS System.
  • sass — impudent or disrespectful back talk: Both parents refuse to take any sass from their kids.
  • space — the unlimited or incalculably great three-dimensional realm or expanse in which all material objects are located and all events occur.
  • tass — a news-gathering agency of the former Soviet Union: merged with an alternative news service to form Itar-Tass (Russian Information Telegraph Agency).
  • trace — either of the two straps, ropes, or chains by which a carriage, wagon, or the like is drawn by a harnessed horse or other draft animal.
  • vase — a vessel, as of glass, porcelain, earthenware, or metal, usually higher than it is wide, used chiefly to hold cut flowers or for decoration.
  • wace — Robert [rob-ert;; French raw-ber] /ˈrɒb ərt;; French rɔˈbɛr/ (Show IPA), ("Wace of Jersey") c1100–c1180, Anglo-Norman poet born on the Channel Island of Jersey.
  • ace — An ace is a playing card with a single symbol on it. In most card games, the ace of a particular suit has either the highest or the lowest value of the cards in that suit.
  • ass — An ass is an animal which is related to a horse but which is smaller and has long ears.
  • base — The base of something is its lowest edge or part.
  • brace — If you brace yourself for something unpleasant or difficult, you prepare yourself for it.
  • brass — Brass is a yellow-coloured metal made from copper and zinc. It is used especially for making ornaments and musical instruments.
  • cas — Court of Arbitration for Sport
  • case — A particular case is a particular situation or incident, especially one that you are using as an individual example or instance of something.
  • cass — Lewis1782-1866; U.S. statesman
  • cayce — a town in central South Carolina.
  • chase — If you chase someone, or chase after them, you run after them or follow them quickly in order to catch or reach them.
  • chasse — one of a series of gliding steps in ballet
  • class — A class is a group of pupils or students who are taught together.
  • dace — A dace is a type of fish that lives in rivers and lakes.
  • das — hyrax.
  • face — the front part of the head, from the forehead to the chin.
  • gas — GNU assembler
  • glace — frozen.
  • glassCarter, 1858–1946, U.S. statesman.
  • graceWilliam Russell, 1832–1904, U.S. financier and shipping magnate, born in Ireland: mayor of New York City 1880–88.
  • gras — A public domain graph-oriented database system for software engineering applications from RWTH Aachen.
  • grass — Günter (Wilhelm) [goo n-ter wil-helm;; German gyn-tuh r vil-helm] /ˈgʊn tər ˈwɪl hɛlm;; German ˈgün tər ˈvɪl hɛlm/ (Show IPA), 1927–2015, German novelist, poet, and playwright.
  • grasse — François Joseph Paul [frahn-swa zhaw-zef pawl] /frɑ̃ˈswa ʒɔˈzɛf pɔl/ (Show IPA), Comte de (Marquis de Grasse-Tilly) 1722–1788, French admiral.
  • heyse — Paul (Johann von) [poul yoh-hahn fuh n] /paʊl ˈyoʊ hɑn fən/ (Show IPA), 1830–1914, German playwright, novelist, poet, and short-story writer: Nobel Prize 1910.
  • jass — a card game for two persons that is played with a 36-card pack made by removing all cards below the sixes from a regular 52-card pack, in which point values are assigned to certain melds and to certain cards taken in tricks.
  • lace — a netlike ornamental fabric made of threads by hand or machine.
  • lass — a girl or young woman, especially one who is unmarried.
  • last — occurring, coming, or being after the usual or proper time: late frosts; a late spring.
  • mace — a spice ground from the layer between a nutmeg shell and its outer husk, resembling nutmeg in flavor.
  • mass — the celebration of the Eucharist. Compare High Mass, Low Mass.
  • mass. — Massachusetts.
  • nass — a river in W British Columbia, Canada, flowing SW to the Portland Inlet, an arm of the Pacific Ocean, near Prince Rupert. 236 miles (380 km) long.
  • pace — a rate of movement, especially in stepping, walking, etc.: to walk at a brisk pace of five miles an hour.
  • pass — to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • air base — An air base is a centre where military aircraft take off or land and are serviced, and where many of the centre's staff live.
  • air gas — dry air charged with vapor from petroleum or some other hydrocarbon, used for lighting or heating
  • air mass — a large body of air having characteristics of temperature, moisture, and pressure that are approximately uniform horizontally
  • alas — You use alas to say that you think that the facts you are talking about are sad or unfortunate.
  • alsace — a region and former province of NE France, between the Vosges mountains and the Rhine: famous for its wines. Area: 8280 sq km (3196 sq miles)
  • amass — If you amass something such as money or information, you gradually get a lot of it.
  • apace — If something develops or continues apace, it is developing or continuing quickly.
  • arms race — An arms race is a situation in which two countries or groups of countries are continually trying to get more and better weapons than each other.
  • barn grass — a weedy, coarse grass, Echinochloa crus-galli, having a spikelike cluster of flowers.
  • bear grass — Also called elk grass. a tall, western North American plant, Xerophyllum tenax, of the lily family, having narrow leaves and a dense, broad cluster of tiny white flowers.
  • bell glass — a bell-shaped glass jar or cover for protecting delicate instruments, bric-a-brac, or the like, or for containing gases or a vacuum in chemical experiments.
  • bent grass — any grass of the genus Agrostis, especially the redtop.
  • boat race — (Cockney rhyming slang) The face.
  • bunch grass — any of various grasses that grow in tufts
  • cloud grass — a grass, Agrostis nebulosa, of Spain, having clusters of tiny spikelets on slender stalks, used in bouquets.
  • coal gas — a mixture of gases produced by the distillation of bituminous coal and used for heating and lighting: consists mainly of hydrogen, methane, and carbon monoxide
  • contrasts — to compare in order to show unlikeness or differences; note the opposite natures, purposes, etc., of: Contrast the political rights of Romans and Greeks.
  • cord grass — any of several grasses of the genus Spartina, of coastal regions.
  • couch grass — a grass, Agropyron repens, with a yellowish-white creeping underground stem by which it spreads quickly: a troublesome weed
  • crab grass — any of several coarse weedy grasses of the genus Digitaria, which grow in warm regions and tend to displace other grasses in lawns
  • crass — Crass behaviour is stupid and does not show consideration for other people.
  • crown glass — an old form of window glass made by blowing a globe and spinning it until it formed a flat disc
  • cut glass — Cut glass is glass that has patterns cut into its surface.
  • debase — To debase something means to reduce its value or quality.
  • deep space — any region of outer space beyond the system of the earth and moon
  • deer grass — meadow beauty.
  • deface — If someone defaces something such as a wall or a notice, they spoil it by writing or drawing things on it.
  • disgrace — the loss of respect, honor, or esteem; ignominy; shame: the disgrace of criminals.
  • displace — to compel (a person or persons) to leave home, country, etc.
  • efface — to wipe out; do away with; expunge: to efface one's unhappy memories.
  • false face — a mask covering the face.
  • field glass — Usually, field glasses. binoculars for use out of doors.
  • first base — Baseball. the first in counterclockwise order of the bases from home plate. the position of the player covering the area of the infield near first base.
  • flint glass — an optical glass of high dispersion and a relatively high index of refraction, composed of alkalis, lead oxide, and silica, with or without other bases, sometimes used as the diverging lens component of an achromatic lens.
  • foie gras — the liver of specially fattened geese or ducks, used as a table delicacy, especially in the form of a paste (pâté de foie gras)
  • form class — a class of words or forms in a given language that have one or more grammatical features in common, as, in Latin, all masculine nouns in the nominative singular, all masculine singular nouns, all masculine nouns, or all nouns.
  • goose grass — cleavers.
  • ground glass — Optics. glass that has had its polished surface removed by fine grinding and that is used to diffuse light.
  • hair grass — any of various grasses having slender stems and leaves, especially one of the genus Deschampsia, as D. flexuosa or D. caespitosa.
  • hall pass — permit to leave classroom
  • hand glass — a small mirror with a handle.
  • harass — to disturb persistently; torment, as with troubles or cares; bother continually; pester; persecute.
  • high brass — brass containing 65 per cent copper and 35 per cent zinc, used for most applications
  • high mass — a Mass celebrated according to the complete rite, in which the liturgy is sung by the celebrant.
  • horse race — a contest of speed among horses that either are ridden by jockeys or pull sulkies and their drivers.
  • impasse — a position or situation from which there is no escape; deadlock.
  • incase — encase.
  • in case — an instance of the occurrence, existence, etc., of something: Sailing in such a storm was a case of poor judgment.
  • in place — a particular portion of space, whether of definite or indefinite extent.
  • june grass — Kentucky bluegrass.
  • knee brace — a diagonal member for bracing the angle between two joined members, as a stud or column and a joist or rafter, being joined to each partway along its length.
  • lead glass — glass containing lead oxide.
  • low brass — an alloy of about 80 percent copper and 20 percent zinc, with traces of lead and iron.
  • low mass — a Mass that is said, and not sung, by the celebrant, who is assisted by one server, and which has less ceremonial form than a High Mass, using no music or choir.
  • lyme grass — type of perennial dune grass
  • marsh gas — a gaseous decomposition product of organic matter, consisting primarily of methane.
  • masse — a stroke made by hitting the cue ball with the cue held almost or quite perpendicular to the table.
  • means grass — Johnson grass.
  • middle-class — of, relating to, or characteristic of the middle class; bourgeois: middle-class taste; middle-class morality.
  • milk glass — an opaque white glass.
  • misplace — to put in a wrong place.
  • morass — a tract of low, soft, wet ground.
  • nerve gas — any of several poison gases, derived chiefly from phosphoric acid, that weaken or paralyze the nervous system, especially that part of the system controlling respiration.
  • noble gas — any of the chemically inert gaseous elements of group 8A or 0 of the periodic table: helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon.
  • nut grass — either of two sedges, Cyperus rotundus or C. esculentus, that have small, nutlike tubers and are often troublesome weeds.
  • pier glass — a tall mirror, often full-length, intended to be set between windows.
  • plate glass — a soda-lime-silica glass formed by rolling the hot glass into a plate that is subsequently ground and polished, used in large windows, mirrors, etc.
  • point lace — lace made with a needle rather than with bobbins; needlepoint.
  • quack grass — a couch grass, Agropyron repens, a pernicious weed in cultivated fields.
  • quartz glass — lechatelierite.
  • quick grass — the couch grass, Agropyron repens.
  • rat race — any exhausting, unremitting, and usually competitive activity or routine, especially a pressured urban working life spent trying to get ahead with little time left for leisure, contemplation, etc.
  • red brass — an alloy of from 77 to 86 percent copper with the balance zinc; Mannheim gold.
  • reed grass — a tall perennial grass, Glyceria maxima, of rivers and ponds of Europe, Asia, and Canada
  • reed mace — cattail.
  • repass — to pass (a law, etc) again
  • replace — to assume the former role, position, or function of; substitute for (a person or thing): Electricity has replaced gas in lighting.
  • rest mass — the mass of a body as measured when the body is at rest relative to an observer, an inherent property of the body.
  • retrace — to trace again, as lines in writing or drawing.
  • rhodes grass — a grass, Chloris gayana, native to Africa, used as pasturage and fodder in warm climates.
  • sack race — a race in which each contestant jumps ahead while his or her legs are confined in a sack.
  • screen pass — a pass thrown to a receiver who is directly in back of a wall of blockers and who is behind or not far beyond the line of scrimmage.
  • shot glass — a small, heavy glass for serving a shot of whiskey or liquor.
  • smartass — smart ass.
  • spore case — the case or sac in which spores are produced.
  • stained glass — glass that has been colored, enameled, painted, or stained, especially by having pigments baked onto its surface or by having various metallic oxides fused into it, as used in church windows, decorative lampshades, etc.
  • stake race — a race in which part of the prize or purse is put up by the owners of the horses nominated to run in the race.
  • star grass — any of various grasslike plants having star-shaped flowers or a starlike arrangement of leaves, as the North American plant, Hypoxis hirsuta, of the amaryllis family.
  • straight face — a serious or impassive facial expression that conceals one's true feelings about something, especially a desire to laugh.
  • surpass — to go beyond in amount, extent, or degree; be greater than; exceed.
  • sweet grass — any of several fragrant plants, as manna grass or the sweet flag.
  • switch grass — a North American grass, Panicum virgatum, having an open, branching inflorescence.
  • sword grass — any of various grasses or plants having swordlike or sharp leaves, as the sword lily.
  • take place — a particular portion of space, whether of definite or indefinite extent.
  • tape grass — a freshwater plant, Vallisneria spiralis, that has long, ribbonlike leaves and grows under water.
  • test case — a typical case whose court decision may be interpreted as a precedent for application in future similar cases.
  • third base — the third in counterclockwise order of the bases from home plate.
  • town gas — coal gas manufactured for domestic and industrial use
  • wing case — elytron.
  • wire glass — a pane or sheet of glass having a network of wire embedded within it as a reinforcement.
  • wire grass — Canada bluegrass.
  • witch grass — a panic grass, Panicum capillare, having a bushlike compound panicle, common as a weed in North America.
  • word class — a group of words all of which are members of the same form class or part of speech.
  • worst-case — of the worst possibility; being the worst result that could be expected under the circumstances: a worst-case scenario.
  • yard grass — an Old World perennial grass, Eleusine indica, with prostrate leaves, growing as a troublesome weed on open ground, yards, etc

Three-syllable rhymes

  • alpha brass — a type of brass that contains less than 35 per cent zinc
  • attache case — An attaché case is a flat case for holding documents.
  • bahia grass — a grass, Paspalum notatum, of tropical America, grown in the southern United States for lawns and pasturage.
  • bicycle race — cycling (def 2).
  • boarding pass — A boarding pass is a card that a passenger must have when boarding a plane or a boat.
  • bobbin lace — lace made with bobbins rather than with needle and thread (needlepoint lace); pillow lace
  • bottled gas — butane or propane gas liquefied under pressure in portable containers and used in camping stoves, blowtorches, etc
  • breathing space — A breathing space is a short period of time between two activities in which you can recover from the first activity and prepare for the second one.
  • brussels lace — a fine lace with a raised or appliqué design
  • cabin class — a class of accommodation on a passenger ship between first class and tourist class
  • carpet grass — either of two grasses, Axonopus affinis or A. compressus, native to tropical and subtropical America.
  • cartridge brass — brass composed of about 70 percent copper and 30 percent zinc.
  • claiming race — a race in which each owner declares beforehand the price at which his or her horse will be offered for sale after the race
  • cotton grass — any of various N temperate and arctic grasslike bog plants of the cyperaceous genus Eriophorum, whose clusters of long silky hairs resemble cotton tufts
  • coup de grace — A coup de grace is an action or event which finally destroys something, for example an institution, which has been gradually growing weaker.
  • dispatch case — attaché case.
  • dressing case — a small piece of luggage for carrying toilet articles, medicine, etc.
  • finger grass — any of various grasses of the genus Chloris, having several narrow spikes in a terminal cluster.
  • forward pass — a pass in which the ball is thrown in the direction of advance toward the opponent's goal.
  • fountain grass — a perennial grass, Pennisetum setaceum, of Ethiopia, having bristly spikes, often rose-purple, grown as an ornamental.
  • harness race — a trotting or pacing race for Standardbred horses harnessed to sulkies.
  • herb of grace — rue2 .
  • hilbert space — a complete infinite-dimensional vector space on which an inner product is defined.
  • holy place — somewhere sacred
  • ideal gas — a gas composed of molecules on which no forces act except upon collision with one another and with the walls of the container in which the gas is enclosed; a gas that obeys the ideal gas law.
  • inert gas — noble gas.
  • interlace — progressive coding
  • johnson grass — a sorghum, Sorghum halepense, that spreads by creeping rhizomes, grown for fodder.
  • just in case — if it should happen that
  • laughing gas — nitrous oxide.
  • looking glass — a mirror made of glass with a metallic or amalgam backing.
  • lower case — an often small or portable container for enclosing something, as for carrying or safekeeping; receptacle: a jewel case.
  • mardi gras — the day before Lent, celebrated in some cities, as New Orleans and Paris, as a day of carnival and merrymaking; Shrove Tuesday.
  • master race — a people or nation, as the Germans during the Nazi period, whose members consider themselves genetically superior to all others and therefore justified in conquering and ruling them.
  • meadow grass — any grass of the genus Poa, especially P. pratensis, the Kentucky bluegrass.
  • metric space — a space with a metric defined on it.
  • mustard gas — an oily liquid, C 4 H 8 Cl 2 S, used as a chemical-warfare gas, blistering the skin and damaging the lungs, often causing blindness and death: introduced by the Germans in World War I.
  • naval brass — an alloy of about 60 percent copper and 40 percent zinc, with traces of lead, tin, arsenic, and iron, used in marine and steam-generating equipment.
  • object glass — objective (def 3).
  • obstacle race — a foot race in which the contestants are prevented in a specific way from covering the full course at top speed, as by having hurdles to jump, sacks enclosing the legs, or potatoes to pick up.
  • opal glass — a translucent or opaque glass, usually of a milky white hue.
  • orchard grass — a weedy grass, Dactylis glomerata, often grown for pastures.
  • outer space — space beyond the atmosphere of the earth.
  • out of place — a particular portion of space, whether of definite or indefinite extent.
  • packing case — a box in which goods are packed for transport or storage.
  • pampas grass — a tall, ornamental grass, Cortaderia selloana, native to South America, having large, thick, feathery, silvery-white panicles.
  • panic grass — Also called panic grass. any grass of the genus Panicum, many species of which bear edible grain.
  • paper chase — the effort to earn a diploma or college degree, especially in law, or a professional certificate or license.
  • perfect gas — ideal gas.
  • piece of ass — a separate or limited portion or quantity of something: a piece of land; a piece of chocolate.
  • pillow lace — bobbin lace.
  • poison gas — any of various toxic gases, especially those used in chemical warfare to kill or incapacitate on inhalation or contact, as phosgene, chlorine, etc.
  • poker face — an expressionless face: He can tell a funny story with a poker face.
  • polling place — a place at or in which votes in an election are cast.
  • relay race — a race between two or more teams of contestants, each contestant being relieved by a teammate after running part of the distance.
  • roman pace — an ancient Roman unit of measurement, equal to 5 Roman feet or about 58 U.S. inches (147 cm).
  • second base — the second in order of the bases from home plate.
  • selling race — a claiming race at the end of which the winning horse is offered for sale.
  • social class — a broad group in society having common economic, cultural, or political status.
  • soluble glass — sodium silicate.
  • state of grace — grace (def 8d).
  • tourist class — the least costly class of accommodations on regularly scheduled ships and airplanes. Compare third class (def 2).
  • upper case — an often small or portable container for enclosing something, as for carrying or safekeeping; receptacle: a jewel case.
  • upper class — a class of people above the middle class, having the highest social rank or standing based on wealth, family connections, and the like.
  • water gas — a toxic gaseous mixture consisting chiefly of carbon monoxide and hydrogen, prepared from steam and incandescent coke: used as an illuminant, fuel, and in organic synthesis.
  • water glass — a drinking glass; tumbler.
  • whitlow grass — any of various plants of the genera Draba and Erophila, once thought to cure whitlows: family Brassicaceae (crucifers)
  • windmill grass — finger grass.
  • working class — those persons working for wages, especially in manual labor.
  • year of grace — a specified year of the Christian era: this year of grace; the year of grace 1982.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • alkali grass — a plant, Zigadenus elegans, of central and western North America, having tough, wiry, bluish-green leaves and greenish flowers.
  • atomic mass — the mass of an isotope of an element in atomic mass units
  • bahama grass — Bermuda grass.
  • bermuda grass — a widely distributed grass, Cynodon dactylon, with wiry creeping rootstocks and several purplish spikes of flowers arising from a single point: used for lawns, pasturage, binding sand dunes, etc
  • buffalo grass — a short grass, Buchloë dactyloides, growing on the dry plains of the central US
  • canary grass — any of various grasses of the genus Phalaris, esp P. canariensis, that is native to Europe and N Africa and has straw-coloured seeds used as birdseed
  • center of mass — the point in a body or system of bodies at which the entire mass may be assumed to be concentrated
  • geometric pace — a modern form of a Roman pace, a measure of length taken as 5 feet
  • in any case — an instance of the occurrence, existence, etc., of something: Sailing in such a storm was a case of poor judgment.
  • inertial mass — the mass of a body as determined by the second law of motion from the acceleration of the body when it is subjected to a force that is not due to gravity.
  • in the first place — firstly
  • lateral pass — a short pass thrown or tossed parallel to the line of scrimmage or slightly backward from the position of the passer.
  • levy en masse — the conscription of the civilian population in large numbers in the face of impending invasion
  • manila grass — a compact, shade-tolerant, turf-forming grass, Zoysia matrella, of southeastern Asia, having stiff leaves and flowering spikelets.
  • memory trace — engram.
  • natural gas — a combustible mixture of gaseous hydrocarbons that accumulates in porous sedimentary rocks, especially those yielding petroleum, consisting usually of over 80 percent methane together with minor amounts of ethane, propane, butane, nitrogen, and, sometimes, helium: used as a fuel and to make carbon black, acetylene, and synthesis gas.
  • objective case — objective (def 2a).
  • optical glass — any of several types of high-quality, homogeneous, color-free glass, as flint or crown glass, having specified refractive properties, used in lenses and other components of optical systems.
  • pate de foie gras — See under foie gras.
  • potato race — a novelty race in which each contestant must move a number of potatoes from one place to another, usually in a spoon, carrying one potato at a time.
  • prisoner's base — any of various children's games in which each of two teams has a home base where members of the opposing team are kept prisoner after being tagged or caught and from which they can be freed only in specified ways.
  • queen anne's lace — a plant, Daucus carota, the wild form of the cultivated carrot, having broad umbels of white flowers.
  • safety glass — a pane made by joining two plates or panes of glass with a layer of usually transparent plastic or artificial resin between them that retains the fragments if the glass is broken.
  • sergeant first class — a noncommissioned officer ranking next above a staff sergeant and below a first or master sergeant.
  • snake in the grass — a treacherous person, especially one who feigns friendship.
  • venetian glass — ornamental glassware of the type made at Venice, especially that from the island of Murano.
  • volcanic glass — a natural glass produced when molten lava cools very rapidly; obsidian.
  • watering place — British. a seaside or lakeside vacation resort featuring bathing, boating, etc.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • interstellar space — astronomy: space between the stars
  • japanese lawn grass — an Asiatic creeping grass, Zoysia japonica, used especially in the southeastern U.S., having purplish spikelets and rootstalks that send up numerous tough, wiry shoots.
  • magnifying glass — a lens that produces an enlarged image of an object.
  • military pace — a pace, equal to a single step, used to coordinate the marching of soldiers, equal in the U.S. to 2½ feet (76 cm) for quick time and 3 feet (91 cm) for double time.
  • reed canary grass — any of various grasses of the genus Phalaris, as P. canariensis, native to the Canary Islands, bearing seed used as food for cage birds, or P. arundinacea (reed canary grass) used throughout the Northern Hemisphere as fodder.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • conservation of mass — the principle that the total mass of any isolated system is constant and is independent of any chemical and physical changes taking place within the system
  • gravitational mass — the mass of a body as measured by its gravitational attraction for other bodies.
  • relativistic mass — the mass of a body in motion relative to the observer: it is equal to the rest mass multiplied by a factor that is greater than 1 and that increases as the magnitude of the velocity increases.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • interplanetary space — the region of space occurring around the sun and planets of the solar system. The density is normally negligible although cosmic rays, meteorites, gas clouds, etc, can occur
  • relative atomic mass — the ratio of the average mass per atom of the naturally occurring form of an element to one-twelfth the mass of an atom of carbon-12

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • relative molecular mass — the sum of all the relative atomic masses of the atoms in a molecule; the ratio of the average mass per molecule of a specified isotopic composition of a substance to one-twelfth the mass of an atom of carbon-12
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