Rhymes with marijuana
ma·ri·jua·na
M m Two-syllable rhymes
- lana — a female given name, form of Helen.
- lava — the molten, fluid rock that issues from a volcano or volcanic vent.
- llama — a woolly-haired South American ruminant of the genus Lama, believed to be a domesticated variety of the guanaco: often used as a beast of burden.
- mama — Informal. mother1 .
- mamma — Informal. mother1 .
- mana — an ancient kingdom in Iran, in Kurdistan.
- momma — mama.
- nona — a disease of the liver that is clinically indistinguishable from hepatitis B but is caused by a retrovirus or retroviruslike agent.
- rama — (Phumiphon Aduldet; Bhumibol Adulyadej) born 1927, king of Thailand since 1946.
- sama — the Sufi practice of gathering to listen to religious poetry that is sung, often accompanied by ecstatic dance or other ritual.
- sana — Republic of, a country in S Arabia, formed in 1990 by the merger of the Yemen Arab Republic and the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen. 207,000 sq. mi. (536,130 sq. km). Capital: Aden.
- sauna — a bath that uses dry heat to induce perspiration, and in which steam is produced by pouring water on heated stones.
- trauma — Pathology. a body wound or shock produced by sudden physical injury, as from violence or accident. the condition produced by this; traumatism.
- wanda — a female given name.
- wanna — Want to; want a.
- aka — aka is an abbreviation for 'also known as'. aka is used especially when referring to someone's nickname or stage name.
- ana — (of ingredients in a prescription) in equal quantities
- anna — a former Indian copper coin, worth one sixteenth of a rupee
- cama — the hybrid offspring of a camel and a llama
- china — China is a hard white substance made from clay. It is used to make things such as cups, bowls, plates, and ornaments.
- chronic — A chronic illness or disability lasts for a very long time. Compare acute.
- comma — A comma is the punctuation mark , which is used to separate parts of a sentence or items in a list.
- dama — The game of Turkish draughts.
- donna — a female given name.
- drama — a composition in prose or verse presenting in dialogue or pantomime a story involving conflict or contrast of character, especially one intended to be acted on the stage; a play.
- fauna — the animals of a given region or period considered as a whole.
- gama — Vasco da [vas-koh duh;; Portuguese vahsh-koo duh] /ˈvæs koʊ də;; Portuguese ˈvɑʃ kʊ də/ (Show IPA), c1460–1524, Portuguese navigator: discovered the sea route from Portugal around the continent of Africa to India.
- ghana — a republic in West Africa comprising the former colonies of the Gold Coast and Ashanti, the protectorate of the Northern Territories, and the U.N. trusteeship of British Togoland: member of the Commonwealth of Nations since 1957. 91,843 sq. mi. (237,873 sq. km). Capital: Accra.
- gonna — Going to.
- gotta — Have got to (not acceptable in standard use).
- hama — a city in W Syria, on the Orontes River.
- honda — an eye at one end of a lariat through which the other end is passed to form a lasso, noose, etc.
- honor — honesty, fairness, or integrity in one's beliefs and actions: a man of honor.
- joanna — (Cockney rhyming slang) A piano.
- kama — a river in the E Russian Federation in Europe, flowing from the central Ural Mountains region into the Volga River S of Kazan. 1200 miles (1930 km) long.
- lama — a priest or monk in Lamaism.
Three-syllable rhymes
- agana — capital of Guam: pop. 1,100
- alanna — (dialect, Ireland, as a term of address) child.
- banana — Bananas are long curved fruit with yellow skins.
- bandana — a large, printed handkerchief, typically one with white spots or figures on a red or blue background.
- botswana — a republic in southern Africa: established as the British protectorate of Bechuanaland in 1885 as a defence against the Boers; became an independent state within the Commonwealth in 1966; consists mostly of a plateau averaging 1000 m (3300 ft), with the extensive Okavango swamps in the northwest and the Kalahari Desert in the southwest. Languages: English and Tswana. Religion: animist majority. Currency: pula. Capital: Gaborone. Pop: 2 127 825 (2013 est). Area: about 570 000 sq km (220 000 sq miles)
- dutch guiana — former name of Suriname.
- grand lama — the chief monk and ruler of Tibet: called the Dalai Lama since the middle of the 17th century.
- guiana — a vast tropical region in NE South America, bounded by the Orinoco, Negro, and Amazon rivers and the Atlantic. About 690,000 sq. mi. (1,787,000 sq. km).
- guyana — an independent republic on the NE coast of South America: a former British protectorate; gained independence 1966; member of the Commonwealth of Nations. 82,978 sq. mi. (214,913 sq. km). Capital: Georgetown.
- haryana — a state in NW India, formed in 1966 from the S part of Punjab. 17,074 sq. mi. (44,222 sq. km). Capital: (shared with Punjab) Chandigarh.
- havana — a republic in the Caribbean, S of Florida: largest island in the West Indies. 44,218 sq. mi. (114,525 sq. km). Capital: Havana.
- iguana — a large, arboreal lizard, Iguana iguana, native to Central and South America, having stout legs and a crest of spines from neck to tail.
- johanna — a female given name.
- juana — a female given name.
- liana — any of various usually woody vines that may climb as high as the tree canopy in a tropical forest.
- madonna — the Virgin Mary (usually preceded by the).
- montana — Joseph, Jr ("Joe") born 1956, U.S. football player.
- nirvana — (often initial capital letter). Pali nibbana. Buddhism. freedom from the endless cycle of personal reincarnations, with their consequent suffering, as a result of the extinction of individual passion, hatred, and delusion: attained by the Arhat as his goal but postponed by the Bodhisattva.
- obama — Barack (Hussein), Jr [buh-rahk hoo-seyn] /bəˈrɑk huˈseɪn/ (Show IPA), born 1961, 44th president of the U.S. since 2009.
- pajama — of, relating to, or resembling pajamas: a pajama top; a lounging outfit with pajama pants.
- parana — a river in central South America, flowing from S Brazil along the SE boundary of Paraguay and through E Argentina into the Río de la Plata. 2050 miles (3300 km) long.
- santana — Pedro [pey-droh;; Spanish pe-th raw] /ˈpeɪ droʊ;; Spanish ˈpɛ ðrɔ/ (Show IPA), 1801–64, Dominican revolutionary and political leader: president 1844–48, 1853–56, 1858–61.
- silvana — a female given name, form of Silvia or Sylvia.
- svetlana — a female given name.
Four-or-more syllable rhymes
- anaconda — a very large nonvenomous arboreal and semiaquatic snake, Eunectes murinus, of tropical South America, which kills its prey by constriction: family Boidae (boas)
- british guiana — Guyana
- carolina — a former English colony on the E coast of North America, first established in 1663: divided in 1729 into North and South Carolina, which are often referred to as the Carolinas
- closet drama — drama suitable for reading rather than performing
- dalai lama — (until 1959) the chief lama and ruler of Tibet
- lackawanna — a city in W New York, on Lake Erie, near Buffalo.
- mahayana — the later of the two great schools of Buddhism, chiefly in China, Tibet, and Japan, characterized by eclecticism and a general belief in a common search for salvation, sometimes thought to be attainable through faith alone.
- marianna — a female given name.
- prima donna — a first or principal female singer of an opera company.
- santayana — George, 1863–1952, Spanish philosopher and writer in the U.S.; in Europe after 1912.
- tatiana — a female given name.
- tijuana — a city in NW Mexico, on the Mexico-U.S. border.
- yokohama — a seaport on SE Honshu, in central Japan, on Tokyo Bay: destructive earthquake 1923.
Four-or-more syllable rhymes
- bophuthatswana — (formerly) a Bantu homeland in N South Africa: consisted of six separate areas; declared independent by South Africa in 1977 although this was not internationally recognized; abolished in 1993. Capital: Mmabatho
- inverted comma — quotation mark.
- netherlands guiana — a former name of Suriname.
One-syllable rhymes
- genre — a class or category of artistic endeavor having a particular form, content, technique, or the like: the genre of epic poetry; the genre of symphonic music.