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Rhymes with complete

com·plete
C c

Three-syllable rhymes

  • sliding seat — a rower's seat that rides on wheels in metal tracks fastened to the boat's frame, allowing the seat to slide back and forth, thereby tapping the rower's leg strength to maximize the stroke.
  • sugar beet — various cultivars of a beet, Beta vulgaris, of the amaranth family, having a white root, cultivated for the sugar it yields.
  • toilet seat — a detachable, ringlike seat of wood or plastic hinged to the top of a toilet bowl.
  • total heat — enthalpy.
  • uncomplete — having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full: a complete set of Mark Twain's writings.
  • window seat — a seat built beneath the sill of a recessed or other window.
  • balance sheet — A balance sheet is a written statement of the amount of money and property that a company or person has, including amounts of money that are owed or are owing. Balance sheet is also used to refer to the general financial state of a company.
  • balloon seat — (on some 18th-century chairs) a seat having an outline resembling that of a bell.
  • bucket seat — A bucket seat is a seat for one person in a car or aeroplane which has rounded sides that partly enclose and support the body.
  • contour sheet — a bed sheet designed to fit snugly over a mattress or the like, often having elastic material to hold down the corners.
  • county seat — A county seat is the same as a county town.
  • durum wheat — a wheat, Triticum turgidum, the grain of which yields flour used in making pasta.
  • ideal — a standard of perfection or excellence.
  • incomplete — not complete; lacking some part.
  • indiscreet — not discreet; lacking prudence, good judgment, or circumspection: an indiscreet remark.
  • latent heat — heat absorbed or radiated during a change of phase at constant temperature and pressure.
  • luncheon meat — any of various sausages or molded loaf meats, usually sliced and served cold, as in sandwiches or as garnishes for salads.
  • marguerite — a female given name, French form of Margaret.
  • noncompete — (legal) Of or pertaining to a commitment not to engage in competition with another party.
  • obsolete — no longer in general use; fallen into disuse: an obsolete expression.
  • prickly heat — a cutaneous eruption accompanied by a prickling and itching sensation, due to an inflammation of the sweat glands.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • beat a retreat — to withdraw or depart in haste
  • drag one's feet — to draw with force, effort, or difficulty; pull heavily or slowly along; haul; trail: They dragged the carpet out of the house.
  • inverted pleat — a reverse box pleat, having the flat fold turned in.
  • man in the street — the ordinary person; the average citizen: the political opinions of the man in the street.
  • reinforced concrete — concrete containing steel bars, strands, mesh, etc., to absorb tensile and shearing stresses.
  • specific heat — the number of calories required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of a substance 1°C, or the number of BTU's per pound per degree F.
  • variety meat — edible meat other than the usual flesh, especially organs, as tongue and liver.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • kinetic theory of heat — a theory that the temperature of a body is determined by the average kinetic energy of its particles and that an inflow of heat increases this energy.

One-syllable rhymes

  • be — You use be with a present participle to form the continuous tenses of verbs.
  • beat — If you beat someone or something, you hit them very hard.
  • beet — Beet is a crop with a thick round root. It is often used to feed animals, especially cows.
  • bleat — When a sheep or goat bleats, it makes the sound that sheep and goats typically make.
  • cheat — When someone cheats, they do not obey a set of rules which they should be obeying, for example in a game or exam.
  • clean — Something that is clean is free from dirt or unwanted marks.
  • cleat — A cleat is a kind of hook with two ends which is used to hold ropes, especially on sailing boats.
  • crete — a mountainous island in the E Mediterranean, the largest island of Greece: of archaeological importance for the ruins of Minoan civilization. Pop: 601 131 (2001). Area: 8331 sq km (3216 sq miles)
  • date — A date is a specific time that can be named, for example a particular day or a particular year.
  • dream — a succession of images, thoughts, or emotions passing through the mind during sleep.
  • eat — to take into the mouth and swallow for nourishment; chew and swallow (food).
  • feat — a noteworthy or extraordinary act or achievement, usually displaying boldness, skill, etc.: Arranging the treaty was a diplomatic feat.
  • feel — to perceive or examine by touch.
  • feet — a plural of foot.
  • fight — a battle or combat.
  • fleet — an arm of the sea; inlet.
  • free — enjoying personal rights or liberty, as a person who is not in slavery: a land of free people.
  • gleet — Pathology. a thin, morbid discharge, as from a wound. persistent or chronic gonorrhea.
  • great — unusually or comparatively large in size or dimensions: A great fire destroyed nearly half the city.
  • greet — to lament; bewail.
  • heat — the state of a body perceived as having or generating a relatively high degree of warmth.
  • here — in this place; in this spot or locality (opposed to there): Put the pen here.
  • it — sweet vermouth: gin and it.
  • keep — to hold or retain in one's possession; hold as one's own: If you like it, keep it. Keep the change.
  • leave — to go out of or away from, as a place: to leave the house.
  • leet — elite
  • light — a light product, as a beer or cigarette.
  • me — of or involving an obsessive interest in one's own satisfaction: the me decade.
  • mean — to intend for a particular purpose, destination, etc.: They were meant for each other. Synonyms: destine, foreordain.
  • meat — the flesh of animals as used for food.
  • meet — greatest lower bound
  • mete — to distribute or apportion by measure; allot; dole (usually followed by out): to mete out punishment.
  • neat — in a pleasingly orderly and clean condition: a neat room.
  • need — a requirement, necessary duty, or obligation: There is no need for you to go there.
  • neet — Alternative form of NEET.
  • night — the period of darkness between sunset and sunrise.
  • peace — the normal, nonwarring condition of a nation, group of nations, or the world.
  • peat — a merry young girl; darling (used as a term of endearment).
  • peteCharles, Jr ("Pete") 1930–1999, U.S. astronaut.
  • piece — a separate or limited portion or quantity of something: a piece of land; a piece of chocolate.
  • please — (used as a polite addition to requests, commands, etc.) if you would be so obliging; kindly: Please come here. Will you please turn the radio off?
  • pleat — a fold of definite, even width made by doubling cloth or the like upon itself and pressing or stitching it in place.
  • right — in accordance with what is good, proper, or just: right conduct.
  • sea — Self Extracting Archive
  • seat — something designed to support a person in a sitting position, as a chair, bench, or pew; a place on or in which one sits.
  • see — to perceive with the eyes; look at.
  • seek — to go in search or quest of: to seek the truth.
  • seen — past participle of see1 .
  • sheet — Nautical. a rope or chain for extending the clews of a square sail along a yard. a rope for trimming a fore-and-aft sail. a rope or chain for extending the lee clew of a course.
  • skeatWalter William, 1835–1912, English philologist and lexicographer.
  • skeet — a hand consisting of a nine, five, two, and two other cards of denominations below nine but not of the same denomination, being of special value in certain games.
  • sleep — to take the rest afforded by a suspension of voluntary bodily functions and the natural suspension, complete or partial, of consciousness; cease being awake.
  • sleet — precipitation in the form of ice pellets created by the freezing of rain as it falls (distinguished from hail2. ).
  • speak — to utter words or articulate sounds with the ordinary voice; talk: He was too ill to speak.
  • st — Saint: canonized person
  • street — a public thoroughfare, usually paved, in a village, town, or city, including the sidewalk or sidewalks.
  • suite — a number of things forming a series or set.
  • sweet — having the taste or flavor characteristic of sugar, honey, etc.
  • teat — the protuberance on the breast or udder in female mammals, except the monotremes, through which the milk ducts discharge; nipple or mammilla.
  • teeth — plural of tooth.
  • three — a cardinal number, 2 plus 1.
  • treat — to act or behave toward (a person) in some specified way: to treat someone with respect.
  • tree — Sir Herbert Beerbohm [beer-bohm] /ˈbɪər boʊm/ (Show IPA), (Herbert Beerbohm) 1853–1917, English actor and theater manager; brother of Max Beerbohm.
  • tweet — a weak chirping sound, as of a young or small bird.
  • wait — to remain inactive or in a state of repose, as until something expected happens (often followed by for, till, or until): to wait for the bus to arrive.
  • weak — not strong; liable to yield, break, or collapse under pressure or strain; fragile; frail: a weak fortress; a weak spot in armor.
  • week — a period of seven successive days, usually understood as beginning with Sunday and ending with Saturday.
  • wheat — the grain of any cereal grass of the genus Triticum, especially T. aestivum, used in the form of flour for making bread, cakes, etc., and for other culinary and nutritional purposes.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • achieve — If you achieve a particular aim or effect, you succeed in doing it or causing it to happen, usually after a lot of effort.
  • agree — If people agree with each other about something, they have the same opinion about it or say that they have the same opinion.
  • amit — (obsolete) To lose.
  • asleep — Someone who is asleep is sleeping.
  • backseat — relating to or taking place on the back seat of a vehicle
  • belief — Belief is a feeling of certainty that something exists, is true, or is good.
  • believe — If you believe that something is true, you think that it is true, but you are not sure.
  • beneath — Something that is beneath another thing is under the other thing.
  • between — If something is between two things or is in between them, it has one of the things on one side of it and the other thing on the other side.
  • blood heat — Blood heat is a temperature of 37°C, which is about the same as the normal temperature of the human body.
  • box pleat — a flat double pleat made by folding under the fabric on either side of it
  • box seat — a seat in a theatre box
  • car seat — a seat in an automobile; specif., a portable seat that fastens onto a car's built-in seat and is used for securing a small child
  • charge sheet — a document on which a police officer enters details of the charge against a prisoner and the court in which he will appear
  • compete — If you compete in a contest or a game, you take part in it.
  • conceit — Conceit is very great pride in your abilities or achievements that other people feel is too great.
  • concrete — Concrete is a substance used for building which is made by mixing together cement, sand, small stones, and water.
  • create — To create something means to cause it to happen or exist.
  • crow's feet — Crow's feet are wrinkles which some older people have at the outside corners of their eyes.
  • dark meat — meat that is dark in appearance after cooking, especially a leg or thigh of chicken or turkey (distinguished from white meat).
  • dead heat — If a race or contest is a dead heat, two or more competitors are joint winners, or are both winning at a particular moment in the race or contest. In American English, you can say that a race or contest is in a dead heat.
  • deceit — Deceit is behaviour that is deliberately intended to make people believe something which is not true.
  • deet — diethyl(meta)toluamide; an insect repellent
  • defeat — If you defeat someone, you win a victory over them in a battle, game, or contest.
  • degree — You use degree to indicate the extent to which something happens or is the case, or the amount which something is felt.
  • delete — If you delete something that has been written down or stored in a computer, you cross it out or remove it.
  • delight — Delight is a feeling of very great pleasure.
  • deplete — To deplete a stock or amount of something means to reduce it.
  • discreet — judicious in one's conduct or speech, especially with regard to respecting privacy or maintaining silence about something of a delicate nature; prudent; circumspect.
  • discrete — apart or detached from others; separate; distinct: six discrete parts.
  • dope sheet — a bulletin or list including the names of entries in various horse races, and including information on each entry, as the name, jockey, and past performances.
  • downbeat — the downward stroke of a conductor's arm or baton indicating the first or accented beat of a measure.
  • dutch treat — a meal or entertainment for which each person pays his or her own expenses.
  • effete — lacking in wholesome vigor; degenerate; decadent: an effete, overrefined society.
  • fleet street — a street in central London, England: location of many newspaper offices; often used figuratively to mean the entire British newspaper world.
  • fly sheet — a sheet on which instructions or information are printed; handbill.
  • gamete — a mature sexual reproductive cell, as a sperm or egg, that unites with another cell to form a new organism.
  • grub street — a street in London, England: formerly inhabited by many impoverished minor writers and literary hacks; now called Milton Street.
  • hard wheat — a wheat, as durum wheat, characterized by flinty, dark-colored kernels that yield a flour used in making bread, macaroni, etc.
  • high street — town's main street
  • hot seat — electric chair.
  • indeed — in fact; in reality; in truth; truly (used for emphasis, to confirm and amplify a previous statement, to indicate a concession or admission, or, interrogatively, to obtain confirmation): Indeed, it did rain as hard as predicted. Did you indeed finish the work?
  • jump seat — a movable or folding seat, as in a carriage, taxicab, or limousine, used as an extra seat.
  • kick pleat — an inverted pleat extending upward 6 to 10 inches (15 to 25 cm) from the hemline at the back of a narrow skirt, to allow freedom in walking.
  • knife pleat — a sharply creased narrow pleat, usually one of a series folded in the same direction.
  • lead sheet — a copy of a song containing the melody line, sometimes along with the lyrics and the notations indicating the harmonic structure.
  • main street — a novel (1920) by Sinclair Lewis.
  • mistreat — to treat badly or abusively.
  • offbeat — differing from the usual or expected; unconventional: an offbeat comedian.
  • petite — (of a woman) short and having a small, trim figure; diminutive.
  • piet — Scot. a magpie.
  • real — true; not merely ostensible, nominal, or apparent: the real reason for an act.
  • receipt — a written acknowledgment of having received, or taken into one's possession, a specified amount of money, goods, etc.
  • red heat — the temperature of a red-hot body.
  • release — to lease again.
  • relief — prominence, distinctness, or vividness due to contrast.
  • repeat — repeat loop
  • replete — abundantly supplied or provided; filled (usually followed by with): a speech replete with sentimentality.
  • retreat — the forced or strategic withdrawal of an army or an armed force before an enemy, or the withdrawing of a naval force from action.
  • rumble seat — Also called, British, dickey. a seat recessed into the back of a coupe or roadster, covered by a hinged lid that opens to form the back of the seat when in use.
  • scratch sheet — a racing publication giving the betting odds and other information on the horses entered at a racetrack or racetracks during a racing day.
  • secrete — a steel skullcap of the 17th century, worn under a soft hat.
  • soft wheat — a wheat characterized by soft, starchy kernels that yield a flour used in making pastry, breakfast cereals, etc.
  • steam heat — heat obtained by the circulation of steam in pipes, radiators, etc.
  • succeed — to happen or terminate according to desire; turn out successfully; have the desired result: Our efforts succeeded.
  • supreme — Also called sauce suprême. a velouté made with a rich chicken stock.
  • tear sheet — a sheet or page torn from a magazine, journal, or the like, as one containing an advertisement and sent to the advertiser as proof of publication.
  • time sheet — a sheet or card recording the hours worked by an employee, made especially for payroll purposes.
  • track meet — a series of athletic contests such as running and jumping, usually including most track-and-field events.
  • unique — existing as the only one or as the sole example; single; solitary in type or characteristics: a unique copy of an ancient manuscript.
  • unseat — to dislodge from a seat, especially to throw from a saddle, as a rider; unhorse.
  • wall street — a street in New York City, in S Manhattan: the major financial center of the U.S.
  • white heat — a stage of intense activity, excitement, feeling, etc.: The sales campaign is at white heat.
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