Words that rhyme need
236 best rhymes for 'needs'
1 syllable
- Seeds
- Leads
- Deeds
- Beats
- Sheets
- Streets
- Feeds
- Seats
- Bleeds
- Eats
- Meets
- Weeks
- Weeds
- Reads
- Freaks
- Cheeks
- Speeds
- Speaks
- Treats
- Keeps
- Peeps
- Breeds
- Beads
- Pleads
- Creeds
- Steeds
- Heeds
- Meads
- Sweets
- Cleats
- Feats
- Cheats
- Heats
- Geeks
- Leaks
- Creeps
- Fleets
- Greets
- Seeks
- Skeets
- Pete's
- Deets
- Teets
- Pleats
- Sneaks
- Peaks
- Sleeps
- Reeks
- Streaks
- Teeth
- Greeks
- Creeks
- Shrieks
- Squeaks
- Tweaks
- Wreaths
- Meeks
- Sheiks
- Sheeps
- Seeps
- Leaps
- Heaps
- Weeps
- Leagues
- Sweeps
- Breathe
- Jeeps
- Beeps
- Reaps
- Beefs
- Leafs
- Scenes
- Leaves
- Ears
- Dreams
- Teens
- Means
- Schemes
- Jeans
- Seems
- Screams
- Feels
- Wheels
- Briefs
- Chiefs
- Thief's
- Peirce
- Reefs
- Bees
- Trees
- Leaf
- She's
- He's
- Breeze
- Squeeze
- Cheese
- Knees
- Chief
- Beef
- Ease
- V's
- Keys
- Freeze
- Please
- Leave
- Sees
- These
- Deals
- Debes
- Sleeve
- Fiends
- Tease
- Nice
- Peace
- Cease
- Eve
- Hears
- Steve
- Queens
- Grief
- Heath
- Heels
- Beans
- Keith
- Breathes
- G's
- Thief
- Teams
- Beams
- Meals
- Thieves
- Sneeze
- Weave
- Beer's
- Sheath
- Wreath
- Screens
- Meath
- Leath
- Greens
- Sleeves
- Keef
2 syllables
- Proceeds
- Succeeds
- Exceeds
- Recedes
- Misdeeds
- Precedes
- Misleads
- Impedes
- Repeats
- Defeats
- Elites
- Athletes
- Heartbeats
- Beliefs
- Completes
- Receipts
- Techniques
- Depletes
- Competes
- Retreats
- Deletes
- Deadbeats
- Backstreets
- Mistreats
- Worksheets
- Backseats
- Spreadsheets
- Beneath
- Critiques
- Antiques
- Boutiques
- Workweeks
- Thirteenth
- Sixteenth
- Fifteenth
- Eighteenth
- Fourteenth
- Motifs
- Nineteenth
- Umpteenth
- Babies
- Disease
- Worries
- Bodies
- Degrees
- Receive
- Pussies
- Ladies
- Movies
- Stories
- Achieve
- Believe
- Panties
- Always
- Intrigues
- Fatigues
- Colleagues
- Bullies
- Zombies
- Release
- Unleash
- Police
- Parties
- Parties'
- Relief
- Chinese
- Nikes
- Increase
- Theses
- Belief
- Cities
- Relieve
- Believes
- Louis'
- Countries
- Deceive
- Bequeath
- Honeys
- Pennies
- Cookies
3 syllables
- Supersedes
- Parakeets
- Overheats
- Underneath
- Seventeenth
- Enemies
- Memories
- Families
- Masterpiece
- Mercedes
- Melodies
- Overseas
4 syllables
- Apologies
5 syllables
- Opportunities
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Words That Rhyme with Need - Need Rhymes
We found 118 rhyming words for Need. These rhymes are great for any poet, rapper, singer, songwriter,etc who is struggling to find words that rhyme with need. You can click on the word you like for more information or for fun you can Unscramble need
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- Rhymes For Need
We found 118 rhymes for Need
You can browse the rhymes for Need below. Click on any word to find out the definition, synonyms, antonyms, and homophones.
Rhyme | Len. | Syllables | PoS |
---|---|---|---|
Accede | 6 | 2 | verb |
Agreed | 6 | 2 | adjective satellite |
Aidid | 5 | 2 | noun? |
Airspeed | 8 | 2 | noun |
Alwaleed | 8 | 3 | noun? |
Aniseed | 7 | 3 | noun |
Appleseed | 9 | 3 | noun? |
Aristede | 8 | 3 | noun? |
Aristide | 8 | 3 | noun? |
Bead | 4 | 1 | noun, verb |
Bede | 4 | 1 | noun |
Beede | 5 | 1 | noun? |
Bleed | 5 | 1 | verb |
Brede | 5 | 1 | noun? |
Breed | 5 | 1 | noun, verb |
Cede | 4 | 1 | verb |
Centipede | 9 | 3 | noun |
Concede | 7 | 2 | verb |
Cottonseed | 10 | 3 | noun |
Creed | 5 | 1 | noun |
Decreed | 7 | 2 | adjective satellite |
Dede | 4 | 1 | noun? |
Deed | 4 | 1 | noun |
Degreed | 7 | 2 | noun? |
Disagreed | 9 | 3 | noun? |
Duckweed | 8 | 2 | noun |
Ede | 3 | 1 | noun? |
Exceed | 6 | 2 | verb |
Fede | 4 | 1 | noun? |
Feed | 4 | 1 | verb, noun |
Fireweed | 8 | 3 | noun |
Flaxseed | 8 | 2 | noun |
Frede | 5 | 1 | noun? |
Freed | 5 | 1 | noun? |
Freid | 5 | 1 | noun? |
Fried | 5 | 1 | adjective satellite |
Friede | 6 | 1 | noun? |
Gaede | 5 | 1 | noun? |
Ganymede | 8 | 3 | noun |
Gilead | 6 | 2 | noun? |
Glede | 5 | 1 | noun? |
Gleed | 5 | 1 | noun? |
Greed | 5 | 1 | noun |
Guaranteed | 10 | 3 | noun? |
Hamid | 5 | 2 | noun? |
Heed | 4 | 1 | noun, verb |
Impede | 6 | 2 | verb |
Inbreed | 7 | 2 | noun? |
Indeed | 6 | 2 | adverb |
Intercede | 9 | 3 | verb |
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Synonyms of Need
No Synonyms Found.
Antonyms of Need
No Antonyms Found.
Homophones of Need
- Knead
- Kneed
- Nied
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Mirage rhymes and work with them
Wrote for a master class in the poetic community VKontakte such a text on the types of rhymes that I call "mirage". I'm posting it here in case anyone is interested.
Each of us has a good idea of what classical rhyme is. However, sometimes an artistic task requires - or the soul asks - non-standard techniques. As one of them, there may be a non-standard type of rhyme. I know four of them: semi-rhymes, visual rhymes, consonant rhymes close to them and close relatives of classical rhymes - assonance.
It is technically very easy to build a semi-rhyme: the end of one rhyming line should be exactly one syllable longer than the other, and everything should rhyme as usual, except for this “tail”. The saturation of a semi-rhyme is a common subject of controversy among gourmets: some claim that it is tastier in a depleted form, while others, on the contrary, advocate the sharpness of the rhyming parts.
In examples and samples it looks like this:
glove - seal, rubbish - gingerbread, lasso - sleepless, sun - sleep
By the nature of a semi-rhyme, it is obvious that a poem written on it will alternate between feminine and masculine or dactylic and feminine rhymes, and that the most convenient way to rhyme with it is in pairs.
Here's how it might look like (my study, specially for this MK):
Old moon, pale as a corpse,
smoking a pipe in a gypsy way;
lowering a white ladder to the sea,
beckoning an Arab woman up to her to escape,
a maiden with the face of a bronze moon -
does she really suit a sad hijab
mortal life? Sleep Wave
is ready and just waiting for a signal.
However, whole poems are written in semi-rhyme very rarely, preferring to insert it as an accent.
The visual rhyme is believed to have been invented by the British. This is a rhyme based on the visual coincidence of the endings of words (usually only the last syllable) and the absence of a real rich consonance (but invariably the presence of a depleted one, since the letters still denote sounds). In addition to British poets, rappers of all countries use this strange rhyme. I have not seen a single poem created entirely on visual rhyme, but rappers add it as a kind of seasoning to texts rhymed in the most common way.
An example of such a rhyme:
full - moon, ore - true, chairs - crooks, hiding place - tonic, charms - weaving
Such a rhyme can sound very interesting if it is supported by alliteration or assonance of rhyming words.
Especially for the master class, I went to great lengths to experiment and composed an etude already on a visual rhyme.
Do not ask how I got here,
do not be afraid, I am your devoted supporter!
Look at my hand, how joyfully my ring burns
- let it incite you,
after all, he is a gift from your father,
a worthy and glorious Gascon
and my uncle - oh, orphan,
now you are under the protection of Lancelot!
Yes, looking at this exercise, you understand why visual rhyme is used just as a seasoning, and not the main ingredient :)
Visual rhyme's sister is consonant rhyme, based on the coincidence of consonants around stressed vowels and the difference between stressed vowels themselves. Like a regular rhyme, it can be of varying degrees of saturation. Here is a rich consonant rhyme:
frost - reprise, hat - mistake, mountains - Uigurs, doors - creatures poetic ways.
An unsaturated consonantal rhyme is never masculine, because in this case all interest disappears in it. Here are examples of female unsaturated consonant rhymes:
grief - megera, creature - believes, bast - magnifier
Obviously, in order for a poem to "sound" on an unsaturated consonant rhyme, this rhyme must be supported by another play of sounds, for example, alliteration.
If you look again at my study of the moon and the Arab woman, you will notice that, while adjacent lines of the poem are connected by a semi-rhyme, there is also a cross-rhyme with a consonant rhyme:
Both types of rhymes are rather unstable, mirage, but when combined, they begin to reinforce each other, giving the poem a very peculiar harmony.
Finally, I would like to talk about asonance rhyme - based on the identity of the stressed vowels of rhyming lines and the difference in the vowels that follow them. In a rich assonant rhyme, not only stressed vowels coincide, but also the following vowels and the preceding consonant:
foggy - starches, gang - dog, orphans - crowns, glove - Luciana they tyrannize, the banner is not enough, the hands are a bullet
Usually such a rhyme is in dire need of support by other sound techniques.
By the way, in Spanish poetry, assonance rhyme is considered just classical and noble, and exact - folk, rough.
Assonant rhyme is almost always feminine, rarely dactylic, and only for ignoramuses without a sense of taste or beginners is masculine.
If we turn again to my study with the penetrating supporter, we will see that adjacent lines are combined in it with a visual rhyme, while in the poem there is also a cross-assonance rhyme, everywhere unsaturated: orphan, Gascon - Lancelot.
This is another example of how mirage rhymes support each other.
In conclusion, I can not help but note that mirage rhyme requires a good, solid rhythmic or syllabic skeleton - it is almost impossible to write a good poem in a more or less free rhythm and at the same time with mirage rhyme.
A very interesting variety of asonance rhyme is a rhyme with alternating consonants: vowel and can also be of varying degrees of saturation.
This is how it looks in the poem:
A dog roams in my bedroom at night,
A black dog, blacker than the sacred Kaaba.
Wanders and bares its fangs from behind the curtains on the moonlight
A small disk, silvering my window has fallen.
When working with mirage rhymes, it is worth remembering that even the richest of them is still poorer than even an approximate classical rhyme, not to mention rich and rich classical rhymes, and therefore they usually do not combine well in forms other than pseudo-monorim. And yet they can be combined if you create a solid rhyming pattern for them, for example, even couplets with a classical rhyme and odd couplets with an assonant rhyme, or odd lines with a consonant rhyme, and even lines with a classical one.
Rhyme and meaning: "Semantic factor" and the lexical and grammatical structure of rhyme. - Smolensk : SmolGU Publishing House, 2017
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