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Rhymes with cost

cost
C c

One-syllable rhymes

  • bossed — Botany, Zoology. a protuberance or roundish excrescence on the body or on some organ of an animal or plant.
  • bought — Bought is the past tense and past participle of buy.
  • cast — The cast of a play or film is all the people who act in it.
  • caught — Caught is the past tense and past participle of catch.
  • cloth — Cloth is fabric which is made by weaving or knitting a substance such as cotton, wool, silk, or nylon. Cloth is used especially for making clothes.
  • cos — one of the Greek Dodecanese Islands in the SE Aegean Sea, off the SW coast of Turkey. 111 sq. mi. (287 sq. km).
  • coss — kos.
  • cot — A cot is a bed for a baby, with bars or panels round it so that the baby cannot fall out.
  • croft — In Scotland, a croft is a small piece of land which is owned and farmed by one family and which provides them with food.
  • cross — If you cross something such as a room, a road, or an area of land or water, you move or travel to the other side of it. If you cross to a place, you move or travel over a room, road, or area of land or water in order to reach that place.
  • crossed — angry and annoyed; ill-humored; snappish: Don't be cross with me. Synonyms: petulant, fractious, irascible, waspish, crabbed, churlish, sulky, cantankerous, cranky, ill-tempered, impatient, irritable, fretful, touchy, testy. Antonyms: good-natured, good-humored; agreeable.
  • dost — 2nd person singular present ind. of do1 .
  • dust — earth or other matter in fine, dry particles.
  • fault — a defect or imperfection; flaw; failing: a fault in the brakes; a fault in one's character.
  • floss — the cottony fiber yielded by the silk-cotton tree.
  • fought — simple past tense and past participle of fight.
  • frost — Robert (Lee) 1874–1963, U.S. poet.
  • gloss — an explanation or translation, by means of a marginal or interlinear note, of a technical or unusual expression in a manuscript text.
  • got — a simple past tense and past participle of get.
  • hot — having or giving off heat; having a high temperature: a hot fire; hot coffee.
  • last — occurring, coming, or being after the usual or proper time: late frosts; a late spring.
  • loft — a room, storage area, or the like within a sloping roof; attic; garret.
  • loss — detriment, disadvantage, or deprivation from failure to keep, have, or get: to bear the loss of a robbery.
  • lost — no longer possessed or retained: lost friends.
  • lot — lot (def 14).
  • mossHoward, 1922–1987, U.S. poet, editor, and playwright.
  • moth — any of numerous insects of the order Lepidoptera, generally distinguished from the butterflies by having feathery antennae and by having crepuscular or nocturnal habits.
  • must — to be obliged; be compelled: Do I have to go? I must, I suppose.
  • not — (used to express negation, denial, refusal, or prohibition): You must not do that. It's not far from here.
  • oft — often.
  • past — gone by or elapsed in time: It was a bad time, but it's all past now.
  • prost — Alain (alɛ̃). born 1955, French motor-racing driver: Formula One world champion 1985, 1986, 1989, and 1993
  • quashed — to put down or suppress completely; quell; subdue: to quash a rebellion.
  • sauce — any preparation, usually liquid or semiliquid, eaten as a gravy or as a relish accompanying food.
  • soft — yielding readily to touch or pressure; easily penetrated, divided, or changed in shape; not hard or stiff: a soft pillow.
  • squashed — to press into a flat mass or pulp; crush: She squashed the flower under her heel.
  • thought — Informal. the act or a period of thinking: I want to sit down and give it a good think.
  • toft — the site of a house and outbuildings.
  • toss — Terminal Oriented Social Science
  • trust — reliance on the integrity, strength, ability, surety, etc., of a person or thing; confidence.
  • waft — to carry lightly and smoothly through the air or over water: The gentle breeze wafted the sound of music to our ears.
  • want — to feel a need or a desire for; wish for: to want one's dinner; always wanting something new.
  • wasp — a white Anglo-Saxon Protestant.
  • boss — Your boss is the person in charge of the organization or department where you work.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • accost — If someone accosts another person, especially a stranger, they stop them or go up to them and speak to them in a way that seems rude or threatening.
  • across — If someone or something goes across a place or a boundary, they go from one side of it to the other.
  • adjust — When you adjust to a new situation, you get used to it by changing your behaviour or your ideas.
  • aloft — Something that is aloft is in the air or off the ground.
  • alot — lot (def 14).
  • a lot — lot (def 14).
  • bossy — If you describe someone as bossy, you mean that they enjoy telling people what to do.
  • choir loft — a gallery in a cathedral, abbey, or church used by the choir
  • costa — a riblike part, such as the midrib of a plant leaf
  • coster — costermonger.
  • defrost — When you defrost frozen food or when it defrosts, you allow or cause it to become unfrozen so that you can eat it or cook it.
  • distraught — distracted; deeply agitated.
  • faucet — any device for controlling the flow of liquid from a pipe or the like by opening or closing an orifice; tap; cock.
  • forgot — a simple past tense and past participle of forget.
  • foster — to promote the growth or development of; further; encourage: to foster new ideas.
  • frosty — characterized by or producing frost; freezing; very cold: frosty weather.
  • glossy — having a shiny or lustrous surface.
  • jack frost — frost or freezing cold personified.
  • lacoste — René [ruh-ney;; French ruh-ney] /rəˈneɪ;; French rəˈneɪ/ (Show IPA), 1905–1996, French tennis player.
  • lacrosse — a game, originated by Indians of North America, in which two 10-member teams attempt to send a small ball into each other's netted goal, each player being equipped with a crosse or stick at the end of which is a netted pocket for catching, carrying, or throwing the ball.
  • mosque — a Muslim temple or place of public worship.
  • pasta — any of various flour-and-egg food preparations of Italian origin, made of thin, unleavened dough and produced in a variety of forms, usually served with a sauce and sometimes stuffed.
  • roster — a list of persons or groups, as of military personnel or units with their turns or periods of duty.
  • saucy — impertinent; insolent: a saucy remark; a saucy child.
  • unwashed — not cleaned or purified by or as if by washing: unwashed dishes; the unwashed soul of a sinner.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • impostor — a person who practices deception under an assumed character, identity, or name.
  • microsoft — Microsoft Corporation
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