Rhymes with wheel
wheel
W w One-syllable rhymes
- beal — a god of the ancient Celts, a personification of the sun.
- beale — Dorothea. 1831–1906, British schoolmistress, a champion of women's education and suffrage. As principal of Cheltenham Ladies' College (1858–1906) she introduced important reforms
- cele — past participle of celer.
- creel — a wickerwork basket, esp one used to hold fish
- deal — If you say that you need or have a great deal of or a good deal of a particular thing, you are emphasizing that you need or have a lot of it.
- eel — any of numerous elongated, snakelike marine or freshwater fishes of the order Apodes, having no ventral fins.
- feel — to perceive or examine by touch.
- heal — to make healthy, whole, or sound; restore to health; free from ailment.
- heel — a contemptibly dishonorable or irresponsible person: We all feel like heels for ducking out on you like this.
- he'll — he will
- jheel — (India) A pond, marsh, lake or similar wetland area, usually with significant vegetation providing shelter and/or food to a variety of aquatic and semi-aquatic animal species.
- keel — a red ocher stain used for marking sheep, lumber, etc.; ruddle.
- kneel — to go down or rest on the knees or a knee.
- leal — loyal; true.
- lille — a department in N France. 2229 sq. mi. (5770 sq. km). Capital: Lille.
- meal — a coarse, unsifted powder ground from the edible seeds of any grain: wheat meal; cornmeal.
- mele — Alternative form of mell.
- neal — a male given name.
- neel — Louis Eugène Félix [lwee œ-zhen fey-leeks] /lwi œˈʒɛn feɪˈliks/ (Show IPA), 1904–2000, French physicist: Nobel prize 1970.
- neil — a male given name: from an Irish word meaning “champion.”.
- neill — A(lexander) S(utherland). 1883–1973, Scottish educationalist and writer, who put his progressive educational theories into practice at Summerhill school (founded 1921)
- peal — a loud, prolonged ringing of bells.
- peale — Charles Willson [wil-suh n] /ˈwɪl sən/ (Show IPA), 1741–1827, and his brother James, 1749–1831, U.S. painters.
- peel — to strip (something) of its skin, rind, bark, etc.: to peel an orange.
- peele — George, 1558?–97? English dramatist.
- reel — a lively Scottish dance.
- scheele — Karl Wilhelm [kahrl vil-helm] /kɑrl ˈvɪl hɛlm/ (Show IPA), 1742–86, Swedish chemist.
- seal — a member of the U.S. Navy’s special operations forces.
- seel — Falconry. to sew shut (the eyes of a falcon) during parts of its training.
- she'll — She'll is the usual spoken form of 'she will'.
- spiel — a usually high-flown talk or speech, especially for the purpose of luring people to a movie, a sale, etc.; pitch.
- squeal — a somewhat prolonged, sharp, shrill cry, as of pain, fear, or surprise.
- steal — to take (the property of another or others) without permission or right, especially secretly or by force: A pickpocket stole his watch.
- steel — any of various modified forms of iron, artificially produced, having a carbon content less than that of pig iron and more than that of wrought iron, and having qualities of hardness, elasticity, and strength varying according to composition and heat treatment: generally categorized as having a high, medium, or low-carbon content.
- steele — Sir Richard, 1672–1729, English essayist, journalist, dramatist, and political leader; born in Ireland.
- teal — any of several species of small dabbling ducks, of worldwide distribution, usually traveling in tight flocks and frequenting ponds and marshes.
- teel — til.
- veal — Also, vealer [vee-ler] /ˈvi lər/ (Show IPA). a calf raised for its meat, usually a milk-fed animal less than three months old.
- weil — André, 1906–98, U.S. mathematician, born in France: brother of Simone Weil.
- we'll — We'll is the usual spoken form of 'we shall' or 'we will'.
- zeal — fervor for a person, cause, or object; eager desire or endeavor; enthusiastic diligence; ardor.
Two-syllable rhymes
- abele — white poplar (sense 1)
- anneal — to temper or toughen (something) by heat treatment
- appeal — If you appeal to someone to do something, you make a serious and urgent request to them.
- biel — a town in NW Switzerland, on Lake Biel. Pop: 48 655 (2000)
- blood meal — the dried blood of animals used as a fertilizer, diet supplement for livestock, or deer repellent.
- brasil — Brazil
- camille — a feminine name
- cecile — a feminine name
- conceal — If you conceal something, you cover it or hide it carefully.
- congeal — When a liquid congeals, it becomes very thick and sticky and almost solid.
- deale — Archaic spelling of deal.
- diel — of or relating to a 24-hour period, especially a regular daily cycle, as of the physiology or behavior of an organism.
- drop keel — centerboard.
- eared seal — any seal of the family Otariidae, comprising the sea lions and fur seals, having external ears and flexible hind flippers that are used when moving about on land: the front flippers are used in swimming.
- fair deal — the principles of the liberal wing of the Democratic Party under the leadership of President Harry S Truman, consisting largely of a continuation and development of the principles of the New Deal.
- fin keel — a finlike projection extending downward from the keel of a sailboat, serving to prevent lateral motion and acting as additional ballast.
- fish meal — dried fish ground for use as fertilizer, animal feed, or an ingredient in other foods.
- french heel — a high, curved heel, characterized by a heel breast curving into a shank, used on women's shoes.
- fur seal — any of several eared seals, as Callorhinus alascanus, having a plush underfur used in making coats, trimmings, etc.
- genteel — belonging or suited to polite society.
- good deal — to occupy oneself or itself (usually followed by with or in): Botany deals with the study of plants. He deals in generalities.
- great deal — to occupy oneself or itself (usually followed by with or in): Botany deals with the study of plants. He deals in generalities.
- great seal — the principal seal of a government or state.
- hair seal — any of various seals having coarse hair and no soft underfur.
- harp seal — a northern earless seal, Pagophilus groenlandicus, with pale-yellow fur darkening to gray with age, of coasts, drifting ice, and seas of the North Atlantic Ocean, hunted for its fur.
- kiel — two contiguous duchies of Denmark that were a center of international tension in the 19th century: Prussia annexed Schleswig 1864 and Holstein 1866.
- lucille — a female given name, form of Lucia or Lucy.
- mild steel — low-carbon steel, containing no more than 0.25 percent carbon.
- nevil — a male given name, form of Neville.
- new deal — the principles of the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, especially those advocated under the leadership of President Franklin D. Roosevelt for economic recovery and social reforms.
- oil meal — oil cake ground into small particles for livestock feed.
- o'neill — Eugene (Gladstone) 1888–1953, U.S. playwright: Nobel prize 1936.
- ordeal — any extremely severe or trying test, experience, or trial.
- raw deal — unjust treatment
- real — true; not merely ostensible, nominal, or apparent: the real reason for an act.
- repeal — to revoke or withdraw formally or officially: to repeal a grant.
- reseal — close or make airtight again
- reveal — to make known; disclose; divulge: to reveal a secret.
- riel — Louis, 1844–85, Canadian revolutionary.
- sand eel — sand lance.
- schiele — Egon [ey-gawn] /ˈeɪ gɔn/ (Show IPA), 1890–1918, Austrian expressionist painter.
- shiel — a pasture or grazing ground.
- spike heel — a very high heel that tapers to a narrow base, used on women's shoes.
- square deal — the stated policy of President Theodore Roosevelt, originally promising fairness in all dealings with labor and management and later extended to include other groups.
- stacked heel — a shoe heel constructed from several layers of material.
- tool steel — any of various high-carbon steels capable of being hardened and tempered to meet special requirements for machining, etc.
- unseal — to break or remove the seal of; open, as something sealed or firmly closed: to unseal a letter; to unseal a tomb.
- wedge heel — a heel formed by a roughly triangular or wedgelike piece that extends from the front or middle to the back of the sole, used on women's shoes.
Three-syllable rhymes
- a good deal — bargain
- alloy steel — steel that has been alloyed with one or more other metals or elements to improve specific properties such as strength or resistance to wear
- bearded seal — a large gray-to-golden seal, Erignathus barbatus, inhabiting the Arctic Ocean and adjacent waters, having square foreflippers and a thick mustache of long bristles on each side of the muzzle.
- beau ideal — perfect beauty or excellence
- carbon steel — steel whose characteristics are determined by the amount of carbon it contains
- common seal — the official seal of a corporate body
- congo eel — an aquatic salamander, Amphiuma means, having an eel-like body with gill slits and rudimentary limbs and inhabiting still, muddy waters in the southern US: family Amphiumidae
- corneal — Corneal means relating to the cornea.
- crucible steel — a high-quality steel made by melting wrought iron, charcoal, and other additives in a crucible
- cuban heel — a moderately high heel for a shoe or boot
- earless seal — any seal of the family Phocidae, comprising seals that lack external ears and that use the hind flippers for swimming: land locomotion is accomplished by wriggling and by propelling with the front flippers.
- harbor seal — a small, spotted seal, Phoca vitulina, of the Atlantic coasts of North America and Europe and the Pacific coast of northern North America.
- hooded seal — a large seal, Cystophora cristata, the male of which has a large, distensible, hoodlike sac on the head.
- hudson seal — muskrat fur that has been plucked and dyed to give the appearance of seal.
- ideal — a standard of perfection or excellence.
- indian meal — cornmeal (def 1).
- nickel steel — steel to which up to 9 percent nickel has been added.
- orange peel — outer skin of an orange
- puerile — of or relating to a child or to childhood.
- sex appeal — the ability to excite people sexually.
- stainless steel — alloy steel containing 12 percent or more chromium, so as to be resistant to rust and attack from various chemicals.
- surreal — of, relating to, or characteristic of surrealism, an artistic and literary style; surrealistic.
- tungsten steel — an alloy steel containing tungsten.
- unreal — not real or actual.
Four-or-more syllable rhymes
- achilles' heel — a portion, spot, area, or the like, that is especially or solely vulnerable: His Achilles heel is his quick temper.
- automobile — An automobile is a car.
- damascus steel — a hard flexible steel with wavy markings caused by forging the metal in strips: used for sword blades
- lord privy seal — a cabinet minister without portfolio.
- manganese steel — any of various steels containing manganese, especially one that has up to 14 percent manganese, used in work involving heavy strains and impacts.
- stiletto heel — spike heel.
- structural steel — the variety of steel shapes rolled for use in construction.
- vanadium steel — an alloy steel containing vanadium.
- vinegar eel — a minute nematode worm, Anguillula aceti, common in vinegar, fermenting paste, etc.
- virginia reel — an American country dance in which the partners start by facing each other in two lines.