Common multi-word phrases that nearly rhyme with bolding:
6 letters:
old in,
old is
7 letters:
fold in,
sold in,
cold is,
gold is,
hold it,
no king
8 letters:
old king,
one ring,
one wing,
to bring,
to cling,
to swing,
could in,
hold him,
sold him,
would in,
could it,
hold his
9 letters:
gold ring,
old thing,
nose ring,
one being,
one thing,
who bring,
rolled in,
should in,
could hit,
could ill,
hold dear,
now being,
should it
10 letters:
could sing,
would sing,
could hear,
rolled his,
should his
11 letters:
whole being,
whole thing,
could wring,
mould being,
blows being,
close thing,
cloth being,
coach being,
flows being,
growth ring,
known being,
known thing,
phone being,
prose being,
scope being,
shown being,
shows being,
slope being,
smoke being,
stone being,
those being,
whose being,
closed ring,
coals being,
dough being,
globe being,
goals being,
holes being,
poles being,
probe being,
roles being,
rolls being,
should hear,
above being,
alone being,
anode being,
enrolled in
12 letters:
do the thing,
growth being,
loathe being,
stroke being,
throat being,
throne being,
embryo being,
roller being
13 letters:
loathed being,
a close thing,
santokh singh,
suppose being,
unknown being,
unknown thing,
plateau being
14 letters:
approach being,
composed being,
proposed being
15 letters:
approach aiming
Some other possibilities:
What's up with this "phrase rhymes" section?
This experimental new tab on RhymeZone shows you
phrases that might be good matches for your multi-syllable query word. For example, the word
poetry produces phrase rhymes like boba tea and swollen knee and
hopeful he and moments we. Some of these (like "boba tea") are
single conceptual units, while others (like "hopeful he") are sentence
fragments. Both kinds of results may be useful when writing slant
rhymes that cross line boundaries, which are popular in hip hop lyrics and
musical theater. Typically, RhymeZone's phrase rhymes are assonant (share
vowel sounds) with the query word, with some degree of consonant match as well.
You'll often find lots of options in this tab, including many junky ones
that don't work well. Stay tuned while we find the right formula!
Commonly used words are shown in bold. Rare words are dimmed. Click on a word above to view its definition.