Rhyming word for because


246 best rhymes for 'because'

1 syllable

  • Cause
  • Pause
  • Laws
  • Jaws
  • Flaws
  • Cos
  • Toss
  • Boss
  • Claws
  • Ross
  • Cross
  • Loss
  • Sauce
  • Draws
  • Gauze
  • Calls
  • Doors
  • Dogs
  • Dawes
  • Balls

  • Course
  • Saws
  • Baus
  • Straws
  • Gnaws
  • Thaws
  • Wars
  • Yours
  • Walls
  • Dos
  • Maus
  • Falls
  • Songs
  • Whores
  • Talks
  • Cloth
  • Mosh
  • Mos
  • Stores
  • Goss

  • Wrongs
  • Doth
  • Moth
  • Thoughts
  • Walks
  • North
  • Corpse
  • Towards
  • Poss
  • False
  • Horse
  • Force
  • Source
  • Forth
  • Gloss
  • Roth
  • Voss
  • Oss
  • Broth
  • Scores

  • Quash
  • Nauss
  • Cough
  • Halls
  • Froth
  • Dross
  • Pours
  • Sloss
  • Bross
  • Joss
  • Bloss
  • Broad's
  • Floors
  • Corps
  • Fours
  • Wants
  • Pawns
  • Porsche
  • Chores
  • Swords

  • Chords
  • Tours
  • Drawers
  • Kong's
  • Storms
  • Stalls
  • Smalls
  • Horns
  • Dawns
  • Sports
  • Frauds
  • Gongs
  • Mauve
  • Gores
  • Galls
  • Tongs
  • Spawns
  • Spores
  • Off
  • Bores

  • Shores
  • Coughs
  • Malls
  • Sores
  • Roars
  • Crawls
  • Costs
  • Scoffs
  • Bogs
  • Bonnes
  • Alls
  • Lords
  • Boards
  • Logs
  • Courts
  • Swans
  • Blogs
  • Longs
  • Snores
  • Yawns

  • Brawls
  • Lawns
  • Forms
  • Drawls
  • Morze
  • Squalls
  • Thorns
  • Stalks
  • Fogs
  • Morse
  • Prawns
  • Rawls
  • Prongs
  • Trough
  • Shawls
  • Sean's
  • Cloths
  • Ores
  • Warmth
  • Scorns

  • Bots
  • Corns
  • Faux
  • Hawks
  • Chalks
  • Balks
  • Waltz
  • Shorts
  • Norse
  • Moths
  • Schwanz
  • Sorts
  • Offs
  • Dorms
  • Haunts
  • Corks
  • Scoff
  • Walsh
  • Squawks
  • Golf

  • Forbes
  • Taunts
  • Wards
  • Faults
  • Hordes
  • Borns
  • Warms
  • Norms
  • Swarms
  • Ports
  • Salts
  • Morgues
  • Dwarves
  • Warns
  • Mourns
  • Fjords
  • Whorls
  • Fords
  • Vaults
  • Forks

  • Gough
  • Quartz
  • Warps
  • Dwarfs
  • Warts
  • Snorts
  • Swamps
  • Morphs
  • Doff
  • Yorks
  • Mosques
  • Forts
  • Schwarz
  • Poff
  • Toff
  • Swartz
  • Halts
  • Aunts'
  • Flaunts
  • Fourths

  • Kopf
  • Lofts
  • Frosts

2 syllables

  • Withdraws
  • Remorse
  • Emboss
  • Crisscross
  • Belongs
  • Applause
  • Recalls
  • Divorce
  • Across
  • Indoors
  • Restores
  • Discourse
  • Ignores
  • Spitball's
  • Pitfalls
  • Befalls
  • Explores
  • Implores
  • Chainsaws
  • Billboards

  • Outlaws
  • Rewards
  • Reports
  • Guffaws
  • Retorts
  • Resorts
  • Distorts
  • Imports
  • Kickoff
  • Exhausts
  • Reforms
  • Lagos
  • B'gosh
  • Kratos
  • Liftoff
  • Ripoff
  • Kristoff
  • Christophe
  • Pitchforks

3 syllables

  • Saboteurs
  • Pedicures
  • Reinforce
  • Macintosh

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Words That Rhyme with Because - Because Rhymes

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  • Rhymes For Because

We found 79 rhymes for Because

You can browse the rhymes for Because below. Click on any word to find out the definition, synonyms, antonyms, and homophones.

Rhyme Len. Syllables PoS
Abuzz 5 2 adjective satellite
Ahs 3 1 noun?
Applause 8 2 noun
Audas 5 2 noun?
Baas 4 1 noun
Baus 4 1 noun?
Brause 6 1 noun?
Broz 4 1 noun?
Buzz 4 1 noun, verb
Cars 4 1 noun?
Cause 5 1 noun, verb
Chas 4 1 noun?
Chazz 5 1 noun?
Claus 5 1 noun?
Clause 6 1 noun
Claws 5 1 noun?
Coultas 7 2 noun?
Coz 3 1 noun?
Daus 4 1 noun?
Dawes 5 1 noun
Daws 4 1 noun?
Debevoise 9 3 noun?
Diaz 4 2 noun
Does 4 1 noun?
Draus 5 1 noun?
Dupras 6 2 noun?
Flaws 5 1 noun?
Fraas 5 1 noun?
Francoise 9 2 noun?
Fuzz 4 1 noun
Gaus 4 1 noun?
Gause 5 1 noun?
Gauze 5 1 noun
Gaz 3 1 noun?
Glaus 5 1 noun?
Gnaws 5 1 noun?
Guffaws 7 2 noun?
Hawes 5 1 noun?
Haws 4 1 noun?
Ijaz 4 2 noun?
Inlaws 6 2 noun?
Jaws 4 1 noun?
Kaus 4 1 noun?
Laas 4 1 noun?
Lawes 5 1 noun?
Laws 4 1 noun
Luz 3 1 noun?
Maahs 5 1 noun?
Maas 4 1 noun?
Macaws 6 2 noun?

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Synonyms of Because

No Synonyms Found.

Antonyms of Because

No Antonyms Found.

Homophones of Because

No Homophones Found.

Funny pairs of English words

English does not seem too poetic to me, but it is a pleasure to pronounce and hear some English words. For example: higgledy piggledy, hugger mugger, topsy turvy and pell mell. Most of these words rhyme, that is, they have the same final sound, but a different initial one.

The combination of similarities and differences can give us a little push to understand the meaning of the couple, because they all mean the same thing - a situation where everything is confused, in a mess, upside down or scattered everywhere. For example: “My house is all topsy turvy, everything is all over the place” or “Sorry everything is so higgledy piggledy, I will tidy up later“.

Other interesting-sounding examples of rhyming compounds include: hurly burly, super duper, itty bitty, razzle-dazzle, bees knees, and lovey dovey. In most of these stable combinations, the first word conveys the possible meaning of the whole couple, which the second word reinforces, for example, lovey from love and dovey from dove (a dove symbolizing love) are combined to describe an overly sentimental expression of love.

Other compound words include nitty gritty (as in the sentence “Let's get down to the nitty gritty” – let's get down to business) and wheeler dealer (“He's a bit of a wheeler dealer“, which means a person who cleverly uses any opportunities for self-enrichment).

Dilly dally is another interesting sounding combination made popular by entertainer Mary Lloyd. This verb, consisting of two words with the same consonant sounds, means “to hesitate”, “to waste time, not daring to do something”. Another similar word that we all know is ping pong, or table tennis. Zig zag, wishy washy, see saw, and mish mash are other examples of common compound words formed by consonants.

There are also phrases that can be used separately, but in direct proximity carry a greater semantic charge, for example: “They were a dream team the year they won the double.

There are also short phrases of two words connected by an article or conjunction, for example: “I want some peace and quiet“. The phrase “I do not want to be the life and soul of the party, but I will just grin and bear it till the party is finished” uses common nominal and verbal phrases.

Rearranging the words in these phrases leads to a loss of meaning, so the correct word will always be peace and quiet, not quiet and peace. Here and there is a typical adverbial phrase with stable elements, while short and sweet is an example of an adjectival phrase.

With the help of rhyme and repetition, children learn to speak more easily, so it is quite natural that there are so many phrases with repetitions. Try to learn some of them, and then gradually try to use them in your speech. You will not have time to look back, and you will speak like a native speaker.

image: pauly_march

Thirty-three cows or Learning to compose poetry

Yulia Kasparova

“Thirty-three cows, a new verse was born…” Do you remember the song about the little poet? It is about games in rhyme that we will talk today. These games are not only fun. This is a means of developing both speech, and imagination, and non-standard creative thinking of the baby.

To compose poetry, you need to be able to observe, notice the brightest and most unusual things around, be able to choose expressive words, and, most importantly, you need to be able to rhyme. And let the little "inspired rhymers" do not become great poets (although, who knows!), but they will get great pleasure from the very process of creativity, from the joy of creating their own poem. And what unusual and figurative poems written by a child can be! No wonder Korney Chukovsky said: “At the beginning of life, we are all poets, and only then we gradually begin to speak prose.”

There is one more nuance. It is no secret that many modern children do not like to read poetry. But they love making them! So let's use this to grow a little writer into a great reader!

POEMS AND BABY

Starting to read nursery rhymes and nursery rhymes to a very small child, we are doing a great and important work. And it does not matter that the kid does not yet understand the meaning of what he read. It's not the importance. Reading, from early childhood, we discover for the child the beauty and melody of native speech, instill a love for the word, learn to understand rhyme and meter. A kid grown up on "quality" children's poems will most likely not lose interest in poetry in the future. In the first rhyming games, we play with the child intuitively, without even perceiving them as games. When reading a familiar rhyme, we stop at the end of the line, allowing the baby to pronounce the familiar word himself. And he does a great job with it. As the baby grows, his vocabulary grows. And if you have read and are reading a lot of different poems, a 2-3 year old child can already play the game "Tell me a word" with you. For this game, use unfamiliar quatrains with simple, easy-to-guess rhymes. Riddles are also good in which the answer is selected in rhyme. And do not rush to immediately answer for the baby. Let him find the right answer for himself.

If you don't have a book with riddles or poems at hand, you can come up with pure rhymes right on the go. They help the child feel the rhythm of the verse. I often play this game with my youngest daughter:

- Cha-cha-cha, we were at…
- Doctor! - joyfully picks up Masha.
- Zha-zha-zha, they found in the forest ...
- Hedgehog!
- From-from-from, redhead purrs ...
- Cat!
- Ib-ib-ib, grew up in the forest ...

- Mib! - Here are those! The situation turned out to be not entirely clear to Masha, because we often say not "mushroom", but "fungus". So my daughter invented a word in rhyme, but it means absolutely nothing. And in order not to get any "mibs", select situations that are well understood by the baby, and then the word-guess will itself ask for a tongue. And then you can make it harder. And praise, be sure to praise in any case! Out-of-the-box thinking is great! Why shouldn't some "mibu" grow under the Christmas tree? Who knows. ..

Poetry is a wonderful activity on the way to kindergarten or standing in a long line. And time will help pass, and the benefits are undeniable. You can compose poetry just by looking around: what I see, I sing about. And by all means in turn: the line is mom, the line is baby.

It's more fun:

We're walking along the path
We won't fall for anything!
A bee flies over the flower.
My bangs prevent me from looking…

PLAYING POEM

Abracadabra

Sometimes a child can't rhyme words. Well, he does not understand what rhyme is, and that's it. Try to do the following. Take some well-known poem and retell it "in your own words." For example, like this:

The hostess left the bunny.

Bunny stayed in the rain.

I couldn't get off the bench,

I was soaked to the skin.

Ask your child: is this a poem? No! And why? Yes, because there is no rhyme in it. Now we rearrange the words, and everything falls into place. Find rhyming words with your baby: bunny hostess, couldn’t get wet. Play this rearrangement game, first "spoiling" the poem, and then correcting it.

Applause

For this game we need our hands. You name a couple of words, and the child should clap his hands if there is a rhyme, and raise his hands up if the words do not rhyme. Sand-sock: bang! Table-chair: handles up! Such a game will very quickly help the baby figure out what's what.

“The fourth extra”

You name four words, and the child must choose one that does not rhyme with the other three. For example, in the chain "mimosa, birch, goat, splinter", an extra word, of course, "goat"

Rhymed lotto

For children who can read, you can make a loto. Take a stack of thick paper sheets "for notes" and write one word in large on each. Choose them so that every 3-4 words rhyme. We start playing. We shuffle the cards and distribute 10 cards to the players. The beginner of the game puts any of his cards on the table and reads the word aloud. Each player chooses from his cards those where there are words that rhyme with the one named. Then the player next in a circle puts his card on the table and reads the word, and the rest lay out cards with rhyming words, if they have them. The first person to run out of cards wins.

“Catch the rhyme”

You throw a ball to the baby and say a word, and he must return the ball to you and answer with a rhyme: clock-mustache, squirrel-plate, etc. You can throw a ball and rhyme one word, making a chain: cat-mouse-spoon-brooch-okroshka, etc. And it doesn't matter if it doesn't work right away. A little practice, and wonderful and unusual rhymes will appear. By the way, such games are much more fun to play with a company of kids, for example, at a children's birthday party or while walking. And we often play with the whole family in the car, choosing a word and coming up with rhymes to it in turn until someone's imagination is exhausted. In such a family competition, it is appropriate to name not very used words, such as a yoke or a grip, and at the same time explain their meaning to the child. But dad is not very good at rhyming, and he increasingly chooses wonderful rhymes like "brother-cousin."

"Nonsense-Nonsense-Nonsense"

Here's a game for older kids. After all, it often happens that moms and dads do not know what to play with a grown child. But our little schoolchildren are eager to play and communicate with us no less than kids.

The game "Nonsense" came from my childhood. There was a period when we enthusiastically played it not only at breaks, but also, what is there to hide, in the classroom. I think that this game is familiar to you. Several players (you can have two, but the more the better) each take a piece of paper. Closing your sheet with your hand from prying eyes, write any phrase on top, for example: "Once under our desk" or "Once, in the cold winter season. " Then they fold the sheet so that what is written is closed, and pass it around, telling the neighbor the last word in the line. Now the task of the players is to write the next line in rhyme with the previous one. Then the sheet is folded again and passed on. This continues until the end of the sheet or until you get bored. Then the sheet is unfolded and the written aloud is read. All the players roll with laughter, because they get meaningless, but very funny combinations. Well, that's why she's a jerk. And if you dare to play this game with the whole family on a rainy autumn evening, you will be in a good mood, despite the dull weather.

Miracle charades

Our next game is charades. In them, the given word is divided into several parts, each of which is an independent word: beans, top-ears, etc. In old children's magazines, this useful game was given a lot of space. And for good reason. Charades are a wonderful task for ingenuity and erudition. Guessing such riddles helps to better understand the native language and its diversity. And we will try to compose charades, and then make them to dad. Let him break his head! Charades have many varieties. The most popular among them is an anagram. In it, the word is found by rearranging the letters. Here is an example:

To the seas and oceans
I release fountains.
On the contrary, you will write -
You will hear me in the clock.

(kit tick)

In order to write an anagram, you first need to pick up a couple of words, and then come up with an explanation poem based on it. There are a great many such pairs, but here's a start for you: pump-pine, linden-saw, clever-tsunami, bank-boar, entrance-inhale, midge-chamomile, park-carp, hair-word.

Shall we play Burim?

In addition to the described games, there are others that came to us from ancient times, when any well-educated person was a bit of a poet. Such poems were written in the circle of close people, used as gifts to friends.

“Burime (from French bout - end, rime - rhyme) is a fun game, a poetic task where you need to write poems to pre-set rhymes. It is interesting to play it with the whole family, reading out their works in turn. And this is not just entertainment, but a useful activity that develops creativity, a sense of humor, and expands vocabulary. Rhymes for burime should be unexpected and a little strange. The main requirement for the future poem: common sense and humor. For kids, use simpler rhymes: bunny-flock-box-roll. Here's what might happen:

A hare came out into the clearing.
He sees - there is a flock of titmouse.
He opened his box,
Gave a roll to the tits and poppy seeds.

And then it can be more difficult: in the zoo-business-hot-chalk. It is interesting to play burim using rhymes from famous children's poems. Come on, let's try to compose our own version of the chain: half-paw-throw-good or in a mink-shut up-peel-candles. And you can play "guessing games" by asking the baby to remember in which poem these rhymes were found.

One of the varieties of burime is monorim (from Greek monos - one and French rime - rhyme). In this game, one base word is taken, and the entire poem must be built on the same rhyme. You can come up with lines in turn. For example, we choose the word "duck" and compose the following poem:

There once was a duck in the world,
She loved forget-me-nots.
They bloomed in her stomach.
And this, you know, is not a joke!
One day to visit for a minute…

… well, and so on.

Surely the kid will be interested in composing an acrostic with you. This is a poem in which each line begins with a certain letter. If you read these letters in a row, you should get some word:

Little girl
Eating apricots
Playful squirrel.
Oh, he doesn't listen to me!

Try to play with the name of the baby and his friends, or come up with an acrostic gift for dad or grandma.


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