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Rhymes with lavender

lav·en·der
L l

Two-syllable rhymes

  • amber — Amber is a hard yellowish-brown substance used for making jewellery.
  • azure — Azure is used to describe things that are bright blue.
  • bender — If someone goes on a bender, they drink a very large amount of alcohol.
  • blender — A blender is an electrical kitchen appliance used for mixing liquids and soft foods together or turning fruit or vegetables into liquid.
  • color — the sensation resulting from stimulation of the retina of the eye by light waves of certain lengths
  • dangler — to hang loosely, especially with a jerking or swaying motion: The rope dangled in the breeze.
  • ender — Something which ends another thing.
  • fender — the pressed and formed sheet-metal part mounted over the road wheels of an automobile, bicycle, etc., to reduce the splashing of mud, water, and the like.
  • gander — a town in E Newfoundland, in Canada: airport on the great circle route between New York and northern Europe.
  • gender — either the male or female division of a species, especially as differentiated by social and cultural roles and behavior: the feminine gender. Compare sex (def 1).
  • handler — a person or thing that handles.
  • jasmine — a female given name.
  • lather — a worker who puts up laths.
  • laughter — the action or sound of laughing.
  • lava — the molten, fluid rock that issues from a volcano or volcanic vent.
  • lender — to grant the use of (something) on condition that it or its equivalent will be returned.
  • orange — methyl orange.
  • rattler — a rattlesnake.
  • render — to cause to be or become; make: to render someone helpless.
  • saddler — a person who makes, repairs, or sells saddlery.
  • sender — a person or thing that sends.
  • tender — soft or delicate in substance; not hard or tough: a tender steak.
  • under — beneath and covered by: under a table; under a tree.
  • vendor — a person or agency that sells.
  • wander — to ramble without a definite purpose or objective; roam, rove, or stray: to wander over the earth.
  • wonder — to think or speculate curiously: to wonder about the origin of the solar system.
  • wrangler — a cowboy, especially one in charge of saddle horses.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • albacore — a tunny, Thunnus alalunga, occurring mainly in warm regions of the Atlantic and Pacific. It has very long pectoral fins and is a valued food fish
  • amateur — An amateur is someone who does something as a hobby and not as a job.
  • angular — Angular things have shapes that seem to contain a lot of straight lines and sharp points.
  • annular — ring-shaped; of or forming a ring
  • aquifer — In geology, an aquifer is an area of rock underneath the surface of the earth which absorbs and holds water.
  • atmosphere — A planet's atmosphere is the layer of air or other gases around it.
  • avatar — An avatar is an image that represents you on the screen in an online game or chatroom
  • avenue — Avenue is sometimes used in the names of streets. The written abbreviation Ave. is also used.
  • bachelor — A bachelor is a man who has never married.
  • balancer — a person or thing that balances
  • balthazar — a wine bottle holding the equivalent of sixteen normal bottles (approximately 12 litres)
  • bangalore — a city in S India, capital of Karnataka state: printing, textiles, pharmaceuticals. Pop: 4 292 223 (2001)
  • banister — A banister is a rail supported by posts and fixed along the side of a staircase. The plural banisters can be used to refer to one of these rails.
  • bannister — Sir Roger (Gilbert). born 1929, British athlete and doctor: first man to run a mile in under four minutes (1954)
  • calendar — A calendar is a chart or device which displays the date and the day of the week, and often the whole of a particular year divided up into months, weeks, and days.
  • caliber — the size of a bullet or shell as measured by its diameter
  • caliper — Calipers are an instrument consisting of two long, thin pieces of metal joined together at one end, and are used to measure the size of things.
  • canada — a country in North America: the second largest country in the world; first permanent settlements by Europeans were made by the French from 1605; ceded to Britain in 1763 after a series of colonial wars; established as the Dominion of Canada in 1867; a member of the Commonwealth. It consists generally of sparsely inhabited tundra regions, rich in natural resources, in the north, the Rocky Mountains in the west, the Canadian Shield in the east, and vast central prairies; the bulk of the population is concentrated along the US border and the Great Lakes in the south. Languages: English and French. Religion: Christian majority. Currency: Canadian dollar. Capital: Ottawa. Pop: 34 568 211 (2013 est). Area: 9 976 185 sq km (3 851 809 sq miles)
  • canister — A canister is a strong metal container. It is used to hold gases or chemical substances.
  • carpenter — A carpenter is a person whose job is making and repairing wooden things.
  • catheter — A catheter is a tube which is used to introduce liquids into a human body or to withdraw liquids from it.
  • cavalier — If you describe a person or their behaviour as cavalier, you are criticizing them because you think that they do not consider other people's feelings or take account of the seriousness of a situation.
  • chancellor — Chancellor is the title of the head of government in Germany and Austria.
  • falconer — a person who hunts with falcons or follows the sport of hawking.
  • fastener — any of various devices for fastening.
  • gardener — a person who is employed to cultivate or care for a garden, lawn, etc.
  • gatherer — to bring together into one group, collection, or place: to gather firewood; to gather the troops.
  • glandular — consisting of, containing, or bearing glands.
  • grandmother — the mother of one's father or mother.
  • granular — of the nature of granules; grainy.
  • handlebar — Usually, handlebars. the curved steering bar of a bicycle, motorcycle, etc., placed in front of the rider and gripped by the hands. handlebar moustache.
  • janitor — a person employed in an apartment house, office building, school, etc., to clean the public areas, remove garbage, and do minor repairs; caretaker.
  • kandahar — a city in S Afghanistan.
  • labrador — a peninsula in NE North America surrounded by Hudson Bay, the Atlantic, and the Gulf of St. Lawrence, containing the Canadian provinces of Newfoundland and Quebec. 510,000 sq. mi. (1,320,900 sq. km).
  • lackluster — lacking brilliance or radiance; dull: lackluster eyes.
  • lancashire — a county in NW England. 1174 sq. mi. (3040 sq. km).
  • lancaster — the English royal family that reigned 1399–1461, descended from John of Gaunt (Duke of Lancaster), and that included Henry IV, Henry V, and Henry VI. Compare York (def 1).
  • latimerHugh, c1470–1555, English Protestant Reformation bishop, reformer, and martyr.
  • manager — a person who has control or direction of an institution, business, etc., or of a part, division, or phase of it.
  • massacre — the unnecessary, indiscriminate killing of a large number of human beings or animals, as in barbarous warfare or persecution or for revenge or plunder.
  • matador — the principal bullfighter in a bullfight who passes the bull with a muleta and then, in many countries, kills it with a sword thrust; a torero.
  • passenger — a person who is traveling in an automobile, bus, train, airplane, or other conveyance, especially one who is not the driver, pilot, or the like.
  • salvador — a coastal state of E Brazil. 216,130 sq. mi. (559,700 sq. km). Capital: Salvador.
  • scavenger — an animal or other organism that feeds on dead organic matter.
  • stamina — a plural of stamen.
  • stratosphere — the region of the upper atmosphere extending upward from the tropopause to about 30 miles (50 km) above the earth, characterized by little vertical change in temperature.
  • surrender — to yield (something) to the possession or power of another; deliver up possession of on demand or under duress: to surrender the fort to the enemy; to surrender the stolen goods to the police.
  • tablature — Music. any of various systems of music notation using letters, numbers, or other signs to indicate the strings, frets, keys, etc., to be played.
  • traveler — a person or thing that travels.
  • traveller — a person or thing that travels.
  • vascular — pertaining to, composed of, or provided with vessels or ducts that convey fluids, as blood, lymph, or sap.
  • wagoner — a person who drives a wagon.
  • zanzibar — an island off the E coast of Africa: with Pemba and adjacent small islands it formerly comprised a sultanate under British protection; became independent in 1963; now part of Tanzania. 640 sq. mi. (1658 sq. km).

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • ambassador — An ambassador is an important official who lives in a foreign country and represents his or her own country's interests there.
  • capacitor — A capacitor is a device for accumulating electric charge.
  • challenger — A challenger is someone who competes with you for a position or title that you already have, for example being a sports champion or a political leader.
  • diameter — The diameter of a round object is the length of a straight line that can be drawn across it, passing through the middle of it.
  • elastomer — A natural or synthetic polymer having elastic properties, e.g., rubber.
  • examiner — A person whose job is to inspect something; an inspector.
  • knight bachelor — bachelor (def 3).
  • lord chancellor — the highest judicial officer of the British crown: law adviser of the ministry, keeper of the great seal, presiding officer in the House of Lords, etc.
  • parameter — formal argument
  • rectangular — shaped like a rectangle.
  • salamander — any tailed amphibian of the order Caudata, having a soft, moist, scaleless skin, typically aquatic as a larva and semiterrestrial as an adult: several species are endangered.
  • san salvador — a republic in NW Central America. 13,176 sq. mi. (34,125 sq. km). Capital: San Salvador.
  • slide fastener — zipper (def 2).
  • spectacular — of or like a spectacle; marked by or given to an impressive, large-scale display.
  • stage manager — a person responsible for the technical details of a theatrical production, assisting the director during rehearsal, supervising the lighting, costuming, setting, prompting, etc., and assuming full responsibility for the stage during a performance of a play.
  • triangular — pertaining to or having the form of a triangle; three-cornered.
  • vernacular — (of language) native or indigenous (opposed to literary or learned).
  • vice chancellor — a substitute, deputy, or subordinate chancellor.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • city manager — (in the US) an administrator hired by a municipal council to manage its affairs
  • equiangular — Having equal angles.
  • fellow traveler — a person who supports or sympathizes with a political party, especially the Communist Party, but is not an enrolled member.
  • gastrovascular — serving for digestion and circulation, as a cavity.
  • hindu calendar — a lunisolar calendar that governs all Hindu and most Indian festivals, known from about 1000 b.c. and subsequently modified during the 4th and 6th centuries a.d.
  • julian calendar — the calendar established by Julius Caesar in 46 b.c., fixing the length of the year at 365 days and at 366 days every fourth year. There are 12 months of 30 or 31 days, except for February (which has 28 days with the exception of every fourth year, or leap year, when it has 29 days).
  • roman calendar — the calendar in use in ancient Rome until 46 b.c., when it was replaced with the Julian calendar.
  • vernier caliper — a caliper formed of two pieces sliding across one another, one having a graduated scale and the other a vernier.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • cardiovascular — of the heart and the blood vessels as a unified body system
  • gregorian calendar — the reformed Julian calendar now in use, according to which the ordinary year consists of 365 days, and a leap year of 366 days occurs in every year whose number is exactly divisible by 4 except centenary years whose numbers are not exactly divisible by 400, as 1700, 1800, and 1900.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • medical examiner — a physician or other person trained in medicine who is appointed by a city, county, or the like, to perform autopsies on the bodies of persons supposed to have died from unnatural causes and to investigate the cause and circumstances of such deaths.
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