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Rhymes with cap

cap
C c

One-syllable rhymes

  • app — An app is a computer program that is written and designed for a specific purpose.
  • capp — Al, full name Alfred Caplin. 1909–79, US cartoonist, famous for his comic strip Li'l Abner
  • chap — A chap is a man or boy.
  • clap — When you clap, you hit your hands together to show appreciation or attract attention.
  • crap — If you describe something as crap, you think that it is wrong or of very poor quality.
  • flap — to swing or sway back and forth loosely, especially with noise: A loose shutter flapped outside the window.
  • frap — to bind or wrap tightly with ropes or chains.
  • gap — a department in SE France. 2179 sq. mi. (5645 sq. km). Capital: Gap.
  • hapBenedict, 1741–1801, American general in the Revolutionary War who became a traitor.
  • jap — a term used to refer to a pampered young Jewish-American woman, especially one who takes material advantages for granted.
  • lap — the act of lapping liquid.
  • lapp — Also called Laplander [lap-lan-der, -luh n-] /ˈlæpˌlæn dər, -lən-/ (Show IPA). a member of a Finnic people of northern Norway, Sweden, Finland, and adjacent regions.
  • mapWalter, c1140–1209? Welsh ecclesiastic, poet, and satirist.
  • nap — to sleep for a short time; doze.
  • pap — a teat; nipple.
  • pappJoseph (Yosl Papirofsky) 1921–91, U.S. theatrical producer and director.
  • rap — to carry off; transport.
  • rappGeorge, 1757–1847, U.S. religious preacher, born in Germany: leader of the Harmonists.
  • sap — Fortification. a deep, narrow trench constructed so as to form an approach to a besieged place or an enemy's position.
  • scrap — a fight or quarrel: She got into a scrap with her in-laws.
  • slap — a gap or opening, as in a fence, wall, cloud bank, or line of troops.
  • snap — to make a sudden, sharp, distinct sound; crack, as a whip; crackle.
  • strap — a narrow strip of flexible material, especially leather, as for fastening or holding things together.
  • tap — Telocator Alphanumeric Protocol
  • trap — a ladder or ladderlike device used to reach a loft, attic, etc.
  • wrap — to enclose in something wound or folded about (often followed by up): She wrapped her head in a scarf.
  • yap — to bark sharply, shrilly, or snappishly; yelp.
  • yapp — circuit binding.
  • zap — to kill or shoot.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • bubble wrap — a type of polythene wrapping containing many small air pockets, used as a protective covering when transporting breakable goods
  • chin strap — a strap attached to a hat for passing under the chin of the wearer.
  • cold snap — A cold snap is a short period of cold and icy weather.
  • pace lap — a lap before the beginning of an auto race for warming up the engines and giving the field a moving start.
  • recap — to recondition (a worn automobile tire) by cementing on a strip of prepared rubber and vulcanizing by subjecting to heat and pressure in a mold.
  • sand trap — (on a golf course) a shallow pit partly filled with sand, usually located near a green, and designed to serve as a hazard.
  • sketch map — a rough map of the principal features of a locale, as one drawn from memory.
  • spark gap — a space between two electrodes, across which a discharge of electricity may take place.
  • speed trap — a section of a road where hidden police, radar, etc., carefully check the speed of motorists and strictly enforce traffic regulations: sometimes characterized by hard-to-see signals, hidden traffic signs, etc.
  • steel trap — a trap for catching animals, consisting of spring-operated steel jaws with sharp projections that clamp shut.
  • trade gap — difference in value between nation's imports and exports
  • unwrap — to remove or open the wrapping of.
  • wind gap — a cut that indents only the upper part of a mountain ridge, usually a former water gap.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • contour map — a map that indicates the physical features of the land; topographic map
  • landing flap — a flap in the undersurface of the trailing edge of an aircraft wing, capable of being moved downward to increase either lift or drag or both, as for landing. Compare split flap (def 1).
  • plastic wrap — a very thin, transparent sheet of plastic, usually packaged in rolls and often having the ability to cling to other substances, used especially to wrap and store food and for microwave cooking.
  • relief map — a map showing the relief of an area, usually by generalized contour lines.
  • shoulder strap — a strap worn over the shoulder, as to support a garment.
  • water gap — a transverse gap in a mountain ridge, cut by and giving passage to a stream or river.
  • weather map — a map or chart showing weather conditions over a wide area at a particular time, compiled from simultaneous observations at different places.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • cumberland gap — pass in the Cumberland Plateau, at the juncture of the Va., Ky., & Tenn. borders: c. 1,700 ft (518 m) high
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