Common multi-word phrases that nearly rhyme with immer:
6 letters:
in her,
if her,
is her,
it her,
la mer,
in der,
in per
7 letters:
win her,
bit her,
did her,
hid her,
hit her,
big sur,
bis zur,
it hurt,
mit der
8 letters:
fill her,
hear her,
kill her,
kiss her,
miss her,
near her,
pick her,
till her,
were her,
wish her,
with her,
in earth,
is heard,
lift her,
year per
9 letters:
being her,
bring her,
which her,
gum myrrh,
since her,
think her,
were hurt,
will earn,
will hurt,
with hers,
years her,
until her,
doing her
10 letters:
being hurt,
brings her,
twin earth,
filled her,
his search,
killed her,
kissed her,
missed her,
picked her,
still wore,
this earth,
were heard,
will learn,
wished her,
with earth,
with third,
asking her,
become her,
seeing her,
assist her
11 letters:
being heard,
bring earth,
inner earth,
thing heard,
brick earth,
chris heard,
cleared her,
gripped her,
paris heard,
slipped her,
smith heard,
still heard,
still learn,
there heard,
thick curve,
thick earth,
this search,
click merge,
drawing her,
knowing her,
showing her
12 letters:
touching her,
spring earth,
bitter earth,
chris searle,
mitch bouyer,
which church,
billed murre,
convince her,
throwing her,
virgin earth,
offering her,
consider her
13 letters:
encourage her
14 letters:
touching earth
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.