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Rhymes with duress

du·ress
D d

One-syllable rhymes

  • bless — When someone such as a priest blesses people or things, he asks for God's favour and protection for them.
  • chess — Chess is a game for two people, played on a chessboard. Each player has 16 pieces, including a king. Your aim is to move your pieces so that your opponent's king cannot escape being taken.
  • dress — an outer garment for women and girls, consisting of bodice and skirt in one piece.
  • guess — to arrive at or commit oneself to an opinion about (something) without having sufficient evidence to support the opinion fully: to guess a person's weight.
  • less — not at all (used before a verb): He little knows what awaits him.
  • mess — a dirty, untidy, or disordered condition: The room was in a mess.
  • ness — a headland; promontory; cape.
  • press — to force into service, especially naval or military service; impress.
  • stress — importance attached to a thing: to lay stress upon good manners. Synonyms: significance, meaning, emphasis, consequence; weight, value, worth.
  • tress — Usually, tresses. long locks or curls of hair.
  • yes — (used to express affirmation or assent or to mark the addition of something emphasizing and amplifying a previous statement): Do you want that? Yes, I do.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • address — Your address is the number of the house, flat, or apartment and the name of the street and the town where you live or work.
  • caress — If you caress someone, you stroke them gently and affectionately.
  • confess — If someone confesses to doing something wrong, they admit that they did it.
  • digress — to deviate or wander away from the main topic or purpose in speaking or writing; depart from the principal line of argument, plot, study, etc.
  • distress — great pain, anxiety, or sorrow; acute physical or mental suffering; affliction; trouble.
  • finesse — extreme delicacy or subtlety in action, performance, skill, discrimination, taste, etc.
  • impress — to press or force into public service, as sailors.
  • obsess — to dominate or preoccupy the thoughts, feelings, or desires of (a person); beset, trouble, or haunt persistently or abnormally: Suspicion obsessed him.
  • princess — a nonreigning female member of a royal family.
  • process — a systematic series of actions directed to some end: to devise a process for homogenizing milk.
  • regress — to move backward; go back.
  • success — the favorable or prosperous termination of attempts or endeavors; the accomplishment of one's goals.
  • undress — to take the clothes off (a person); disrobe.
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