Rhymes with customary
cus·tom·ar·y
C c Two-syllable rhymes
- airy — If a building or room is airy, it has a lot of fresh air inside, usually because it is large.
- ary — any; anyone.
- berry — Berries are small, round fruit that grow on a bush or a tree. Some berries are edible, for example blackberries and raspberries.
- custom — A custom is an activity, a way of behaving, or an event which is usual or traditional in a particular society or in particular circumstances.
- dairy — A dairy is a shop or company that sells milk and food made from milk, such as butter, cream, and cheese.
- fairy — (in folklore) one of a class of supernatural beings, generally conceived as having a diminutive human form and possessing magical powers with which they intervene in human affairs.
- larry — a hoe with a perforated blade for mixing mortar or plaster.
- marry — to take in marriage: After dating for five years, I finally asked her to marry me.
- mary — (Mary Stuart) 1542–87, queen of Scotland 1542–67; beheaded for plotting to assassinate her cousin, Queen Elizabeth I.
- merry — full of cheerfulness or gaiety; joyous in disposition or spirit: a merry little man.
- scary — causing fright or alarm.
- very — in a high degree; extremely; exceedingly: A giant is very tall.
Three-syllable rhymes
- accustomed — If you are accustomed to something, you know it so well or have experienced it so often that it seems natural, unsurprising, or easy to deal with.
- canary — Canaries are small yellow birds which sing beautifully and are often kept as pets.
- customer — You can use customer in expressions such as a cool customer or a tough customer to indicate what someone's behaviour or character is like.
- family — the children of one person or one couple collectively: We want a large family.
- functionary — a person who functions in a specified capacity, especially in government service; an official: civil servants, bureaucrats, and other functionaries.
- honorary — given for honor only, without the usual requirements, duties, privileges, emoluments, etc.: The university presented the new governor with an honorary degree.
- industry — the aggregate of manufacturing or technically productive enterprises in a particular field, often named after its principal product: the automobile industry; the steel industry.
- suffocate — to kill by preventing the access of air to the blood through the lungs or analogous organs, as gills; strangle.
Four-or-more syllable rhymes
- dictionary — (as modifier)
- huckleberry — the dark-blue or black edible berry of any of various shrubs belonging to the genus Gaylussacia of the heath family.
- missionary — a person sent by a church into an area to carry on evangelism or other activities, as educational or hospital work.
- necessary — being essential, indispensable, or requisite: a necessary part of the motor.
- ordinary — of no special quality or interest; commonplace; unexceptional: One novel is brilliant, the other is decidedly ordinary; an ordinary person.
- temporary — an office worker hired, usually through an agency on a per diem basis, for a short period of time.
Four-or-more syllable rhymes
- premonitory — giving premonition; serving to warn beforehand.
- vocabulary — the stock of words used by or known to a particular people or group of persons: His French vocabulary is rather limited. The scientific vocabulary is constantly growing.