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Rhymes with importance

im·por·tance
I i

Three-syllable rhymes

  • appearance — When someone makes an appearance at a public event or in a broadcast, they take part in it.
  • assistance — If you give someone assistance, you help them do a job or task by doing part of the work for them.
  • distorted — not truly or completely representing the facts or reality; misrepresented; false: She has a distorted view of life.
  • disturbance — the act of disturbing.
  • enormous — very big
  • existence — The fact or state of living or having objective reality.
  • forgotten — a past participle of forget.
  • important — of much or great significance or consequence: an important event in world history.
  • insurance — the act, system, or business of providing financial protection for property, life, health, etc, against specified contingencies, such as death, loss, or damage, and involving payment of regular premiums in return for a policy guaranteeing such protection
  • performance — a musical, dramatic, or other entertainment presented before an audience.
  • tolerance — a fair, objective, and permissive attitude toward those whose opinions, beliefs, practices, racial or ethnic origins, etc., differ from one's own; freedom from bigotry.
  • abortion — If a woman has an abortion, she ends her pregnancy deliberately so that the baby is not born alive.
  • absorbent — Absorbent material soaks up liquid easily.
  • acceptance — Acceptance of an offer or a proposal is the act of saying yes to it or agreeing to it.
  • accordance — conformity; agreement; accord (esp in the phrase in accordance with)
  • acquaintance — An acquaintance is someone who you have met and know slightly, but not well.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • inadvertence — the quality or condition of being inadvertent; heedlessness.
  • unimportant — of much or great significance or consequence: an important event in world history.

Two-syllable rhymes

  • absence — Someone's absence from a place is the fact that they are not there.
  • balance — If you balance something somewhere, or if it balances there, it remains steady and does not fall.
  • chorus — A chorus is a part of a song which is repeated after each verse.
  • distance — the extent or amount of space between two things, points, lines, etc.
  • florence — Italian Firenze. a city in central Italy, on the Arno River: capital of the former grand duchy of Tuscany.
  • fortress — a large fortified place; a fort or group of forts, often including a town; citadel.
  • fortune — position in life as determined by wealth: to make one's fortune.
  • jordanBarbara Charline, 1936–96, U.S. politician.
  • justiceDonald, 1925–2004, U.S. poet.
  • lawrence — D(avid) H(erbert) 1885–1930, English novelist.
  • orange — methyl orange.
  • organ — Also called pipe organ. a musical instrument consisting of one or more sets of pipes sounded by means of compressed air, played by means of one or more keyboards, and capable of producing a wide range of musical effects.
  • orphan — a child who has lost both parents through death, or, less commonly, one parent.
  • portent — an indication or omen of something about to happen, especially something momentous.
  • portion — a part of any whole, either separated from or integrated with it: I read a portion of the manuscript.
  • sentence — Grammar. a grammatical unit of one or more words that expresses an independent statement, question, request, command, exclamation, etc., and that typically has a subject as well as a predicate, as in John is here. or Is John here? In print or writing, a sentence typically begins with a capital letter and ends with appropriate punctuation; in speech it displays recognizable, communicative intonation patterns and is often marked by preceding and following pauses.
  • shorten — to make short or shorter.
  • shortness — having little length; not long.
  • silence — absence of any sound or noise; stillness.
  • status — the position of an individual in relation to another or others, especially in regard to social or professional standing.
  • substance — that of which a thing consists; physical matter or material: form and substance.
  • warden — any of several pears having a crisp, firm flesh, used in cookery.
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