🎯 Perfect Rhymes for "Adorn"
50 wordsThese words rhyme exactly with "adorn" — same ending sound.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| forlorn | 2 | noun | Pitifully sad, wretched, miserable; lonely, especially from feeling abandoned, deserted, forsaken. |
| scorn | 1 | noun | (transitive) To feel or display contempt or disdain for something or somebody; to despise. |
| horn | 1 | noun | (countable, zootomy) A hard growth of keratin that protrudes from the top of the head of certain animals, usually paired. |
| sworn | 1 | Given or declared under oath. | |
| unicorn | 3 | noun | (mythology) A mythical horse, widely believed to exist until the 17th century, with a single, straight, spiraled horn projecting from its forehead. |
| mourn | 1 | verb | (ambitransitive) To express sadness or sorrow for; to grieve over (especially a death). |
| porn | 1 | noun | (uncountable, informal) Pornography. |
| torn | 1 | Unable to decide between multiple options. | |
| worn | 1 | Damaged and shabby as a result of much use. | |
| shoehorn | 2 | noun | A smooth tool that assists in putting the foot into a shoe, by sliding the heel in after the toe is in place. |
| lowborn | 2 | Alternative spelling of low-born. [Born in a family of low status.] | |
| morne | 1 | noun | A small, rounded hill. |
| unborn | 2 | noun | Not yet delivered; still existing in the mother's womb. |
| reborn | 2 | noun | Revived or regenerated, especially emotionally or spiritually. |
| born | 1 | verb | Having from birth (or as if from birth) a certain quality or character; innate; inherited. |
| inborn | 2 | Innate, possessed by an organism at birth. | |
| shopworn | 2 | Of an idea, a piece or writing, etc.: repeated so often as to have become uninteresting; clichéd, overused, tired. | |
| bighorn | 2 | noun | especially, Ovis canadensis, having large, curving horns. |
| firstborn | 2 | noun | The first child to be born to a parent or family. |
| airborne | 2 | noun | In or carried by the air. |
| aborn | 2 | born, begotten, created, developed | |
| forewarn | 2 | verb | To warn in advance. |
| waterborne | 3 | Transported or transmitted by water. | |
| forsworn | 2 | Having lied under oath; perjured. | |
| winterbourne | 3 | noun | A place in England: |
| popcorn | 2 | noun | (chiefly uncountable) A snack food made from corn or maize kernels popped by dry heating. |
| stillborn | 2 | noun | Dead at birth. |
| morn | 1 | noun | (now poetic) Morning. |
| longhorn | 2 | noun | A breed of beef cattle, having long horns, bred in Texas and other parts of southwest United States. |
| shorn | 1 | Of a person, having had a haircut. | |
| buckthorn | 2 | noun | Any of several, often thorny shrubs or small trees, especially |
| bourn | 1 | noun | A village and civil parish in South Cambridgeshire district, Cambridgeshire, England (OS grid ref TL3256). |
| seaborne | 2 | Transported on the sea or ocean, especially by floating on the sea. | |
| sweet corn | 2 | noun | Any of many varieties of corn (specifically maize) most suitable for eating by humans, as distinguished from corn raised as animal feed; usually with higher sugar content than field corn. |
| post horn | 2 | noun | (historical) A type of brass horn used to signal the arrival or departure of a postrider or mailcoach. |
| candy corn | 3 | noun | (US, Canada) A confection of sugar and corn syrup or honey, supposed to resemble a kernel of maize; typically colored in yellow, orange, and white stripes to represent the colors of the fall harvest; a staple candy of the fall season and Halloween in North America. |
| green corn | 2 | noun | (agriculture) The young ears of corn (maize) harvested while still in the milky stage, before the kernels fully mature. |
| corne | 1 | noun | Obsolete spelling of corn. [(Commonwealth, but not Australia or New Zealand, uncountable) Any cereal plant (or its grain) that is the main crop or staple of a country or region.] |
| frorn | 1 | (archaic, poetic) Frozen; intensely cold; frosty. | |
| bullhorn | 2 | noun | (chiefly US) A megaphone which electronically amplifies a person’s natural voice. |
| pronghorn | 2 | noun | A North American mammal, Antilocapra americana, that resembles an antelope. |
| basset horn | 3 | noun | (music) An alto instrument of the clarinet family, pitched in F below middle C, with a range reaching down to F below that. |
| dearborn | 2 | noun | A city in Wayne County, Michigan, United States. |
| field corn | 2 | noun | (US) Any variety of corn (maize) grown primarily for fodder or use as grain; usually, one with lower sugar content than sweet corn and harvested either to be stored dry (on the cob or off, divorced of the stover) or ensiled along with the stover. |
| bass horn | 2 | noun | A large brass instrument in the bass range, usually referring to the modern tuba or the archaic serpent |
| alder buckthorn | 4 | noun | A deciduous shrub, Frangula alnus, native to Europe and neighboring areas of Asia and Africa, bearing glossy leaves, flowers in sessile umbels, and inedible red berries that turn black when ripe, and historically used as a laxative and to produce dyes. |
| orn | 1 | noun | (transitive, obsolete) To ornament; to adorn. |
| powder horn | 3 | noun | A tool, usually made from an animal's horn, used to load gunpowder into a gun or cannon. |
| squirrel corn | 3 | noun | Dicentra canadensis, a herbaceous plant in the fumitory family with small yellow clustered bulblets, finely dissected leaves, and white heart-shaped flowers, native to deciduous woodland in eastern North America. |
| seed corn | 2 | noun | (agriculture) Seed that is saved from one year's harvest for the subsequent year's planting, rather than being used to make flour etc. |
🎵 Near Rhymes for "Adorn"
50 wordsThese words don't rhyme perfectly but share a similar sound — great for slant rhyme and song lyrics.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| discern | 2 | verb | (transitive) To perceive, recognize, or comprehend with the mind; to descry. |
| support | 2 | noun | (transitive) To help keep from falling. |
| implore | 2 | verb | (transitive) To beg or plead for (something) earnestly or urgently; to beseech. |
| stern | 1 | noun | Having a hardness and severity of nature or manner. |
| concern | 2 | noun | That which affects one’s welfare or happiness. A matter of interest to someone. |
| spurn | 1 | verb | (ambitransitive) To reject disdainfully; contemn; scorn. |
| abhor | 2 | verb | (transitive) To regard (someone or something) as horrifying or detestable; to feel great repugnance toward. |
| transform | 2 | verb | (transitive) To change greatly the appearance or form of. |
| adorned | 2 | Having been decorated or embellished through applied items or alterations (adornments). | |
| return | 2 | noun | (intransitive) To come or go back (to a place or person). |
| report | 2 | noun | (transitive, intransitive) To relate details of (an event or incident); to recount, describe (something). |
| dern | 1 | noun | (UK) A gatepost or doorpost. |
| conform | 2 | verb | (transitive, intransitive) To adapt to something by more closely matching it, especially something normative. |
| absorb | 2 | verb | (transitive) To include so that it no longer has separate existence; to overwhelm; to cause to disappear as if by swallowing up; to incorporate; to assimilate; to take in and use up. |
| churn | 1 | noun | (business, of a customer) To stop using a company's product or service. |
| explore | 2 | verb | (transitive) To travel somewhere in search of discovery. |
| ignore | 2 | verb | To deliberately not listen or pay attention to. |
| abhorred | 2 | Strongly disliked: hated, despised. | |
| turn | 1 | verb | To make a non-linear physical movement. |
| adore | 2 | verb | To love with one's entire heart and soul; regard with deep respect and affection. |
| yearn | 1 | verb | (intransitive, also figuratively) To have a strong desire for something or to do something; to long for or to do something. |
| uniform | 3 | noun | A distinctive outfit that serves to identify members of a group, company, prison inmates, etc. |
| perform | 2 | verb | (ambitransitive) To do (something) in front of an audience, such as acting or music, often in order to entertain. |
| burn | 1 | verb | A physical injury caused by heat, cold, electricity, radiation or caustic chemicals. |
| yarn | 1 | noun | (uncountable) A twisted strand of fibre used for knitting or weaving. |
| reward | 2 | noun | Something of value given in return for an act. |
| galore | 2 | noun | (postpositive) In abundance. |
| platform | 2 | noun | A raised stage from which speeches are made and on which musical and other performances are made. |
| unconcern | 3 | noun | Lack of interest or care; indifference or apathy. |
| earn | 1 | verb | (transitive) To gain (success, reward, recognition) through applied effort or work. |
| inform | 2 | verb | (transitive) To communicate knowledge to. |
| evermore | 3 | Always; forever; eternally. | |
| before | 2 | noun | At an earlier time. |
| adjourn | 2 | verb | (intransitive) To end or suspend an event. |
| unadorned | 3 | Having no additional decoration or embellishment; plain and simple | |
| cairn | 1 | noun | A pile of stones heaped up as a landmark, to guide travelers on land or at sea, or to arrest attention, as in surveying, or in leaving traces of an exploring party, etc. |
| afford | 2 | verb | To incur, stand, or bear without serious detriment, as an act which might under other circumstances be injurious; (usually after an expression of ability, as could, able, difficult) to be able or rich enough; to spare. |
| decor | 2 | noun | The style of decoration of a room or building. |
| darn | 1 | verb | (transitive, sewing) To repair by stitching with thread or yarn, particularly by using a needle to construct a weave across a damaged area of fabric. |
| anymore | 3 | (especially US) Alternative form of any more. [(in negative or interrogative constructions) From a given time onwards; longer, again.] | |
| adored | 2 | regarded with deep or rapturous love (especially as if for a god) | |
| barn | 1 | noun | (agriculture) A building, often found on a farm, used for storage or keeping animals such as cattle. |
| fern | 1 | noun | Any of a group of some twenty thousand species of vascular plants classified in the division Pteridophyta that lack seeds and reproduce by shedding spores to initiate an alternation of generations. |
| good turn | 2 | noun | (idiomatic) A good deed; a thoughtful or selfless act. |
| sterne | 1 | noun | A surname. |
| abort | 2 | verb | (transitive, intransitive) To cause a premature termination of (a fetus); to end a pregnancy before term. |
| aboard | 2 | On board; into or within a ship or boat; hence, into or within a railway car. | |
| point of no return | 5 | noun | (figurative) The point in any process or sequence of events where some development becomes inevitable. |
| answer for | 3 | verb | (ambitransitive) To be held responsible for; to take the blame for something. |
| upturn | 2 | noun | An upward turn or trend, especially in business activity or profit. |
✍️ How to Use These Rhymes
📝
Poetry
Perfect rhymes work best in traditional verse. Use near rhymes for modern free verse.
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Song Lyrics
Near rhymes are common in pop and hip-hop. They keep lyrics natural and conversational.
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Greeting Cards
Short perfect rhymes (1–2 syllables) feel warm and memorable in cards and captions.
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rhymes with forlornrhymes with scornrhymes with hornrhymes with swornrhymes with unicornrhymes with mournrhymes with pornrhymes with tornrhymes with wornrhymes with shoehornrhymes with lowbornrhymes with mornerhymes with unbornrhymes with rebornrhymes with bornrhymes with inbornrhymes with shopwornrhymes with bighornrhymes with firstbornrhymes with airborne