Rhyme Dictionary
Rhymes with “Course”
/kɔːs/
A sequence of events.
♬100 rhyming words found
🎯 Perfect Rhymes for "Course"
50 wordsThese words rhyme exactly with "course" — same ending sound.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| remorse | 2 | noun | A feeling of regret or sadness for doing wrong or sinning. |
| coarse | 1 | Lacking refinement, taste or delicacy. | |
| endorse | 2 | verb | (transitive) To express support or approval, especially officially or publicly; to give an endorsement. |
| source | 1 | noun | The person, place, or thing from which something (information, goods, etc.) comes or is acquired. |
| enforce | 2 | verb | To keep up, impose or bring into effect something, not necessarily by force. |
| concourse | 2 | noun | A large open space in or in front of a building where people can gather, particularly one joining various paths, as in a rail station or airport terminal, or providing access to and linking the platforms in a railway terminus. |
| hoarse | 1 | verb | Having a dry, harsh tone to the voice, as a result of a sore throat, age, emotion, etc. |
| sexual intercourse | 6 | noun | Sexual interaction, usually involving vaginal, anal, or oral penetration, between at least two organisms. |
| horse | 1 | noun | A hoofed mammal, Equus ferus caballus, often used throughout history for riding and draft work. |
| reinforce | 3 | verb | (transitive) To strengthen, especially by addition or augmentation. |
| perforce | 2 | verb | By constraint of circumstances; of necessity, inevitably, unavoidably; as a matter of course. |
| divorce | 2 | noun | The legal dissolution of a marriage. |
| dark horse | 2 | noun | (idiomatic) Someone who possesses talents or favorable characteristics that are not known or expected by others. |
| workforce | 2 | noun | The total population of a country or region that is employed or employable. |
| driving force | 3 | noun | Impetus; a person or thing that causes, stimulates, or motivates something to happen. |
| morse | 1 | noun | (transitive) To transmit by Morse code. |
| workhorse | 2 | noun | (by extension) Someone or something that does a lot of work; something or someone who works consistently or regularly. |
| clotheshorse | 2 | noun | A frame on which laundry is hung to dry. |
| vital force | 3 | noun | A hypothetical force that is the causative agent for the development of life. |
| task force | 2 | noun | (business, government, military) A group of people working towards a particular task, project, or activity, especially assigned in a particular capacity. |
| tour de force | 3 | noun | A feat demonstrating brilliance or mastery in a field. |
| in force | 2 | — | |
| work force | 2 | noun | Alternative form of workforce. [All the workers employed by a specific organization or state, or on a specific project.] |
| counterforce | 3 | noun | A force that opposes another force. |
| gift horse | 2 | noun | (idiomatic) An apparent gift, that has substantial associated costs or drawbacks, especially a gift that does not fit perfectly with the recipient's wants or needs. |
| military force | 5 | noun | a unit that is part of some military service |
| have intercourse | 4 | verb | have sexual intercourse with |
| attractive force | 4 | noun | the force by which one object attracts another |
| taskforce | 2 | noun | Alternative form of task force. [(business, government, military) A group of people working towards a particular task, project, or activity, especially assigned in a particular capacity.] |
| gorse | 1 | noun | An evergreen shrub, of the genus Ulex, having thorns, spiny leaves, and yellow flowers. |
| point source | 2 | noun | (sciences) A source of pollution, radiation, waves, fluid or other substance that has one specific location (and negligible physical extent, distinguishing a point source from other source geometries). In simulations they can often be approximated using mathematical point sources. |
| labor force | 3 | noun | (US) Alternative spelling of labour force. [The collective group of people who are available for employment, whether currently employed or unemployed (though sometimes only those unemployed people who are seeking work are included).] |
| vaulting horse | 3 | noun | (gymnastics) An apparatus with an upholstered body but no pommels; since about 2000 replaced with vault, also called vaulting table. |
| river horse | 3 | noun | (dated, now uncommon) Hippopotamus. |
| saddle horse | 3 | noun | A horse that has been specially trained for riding, specifically the American Saddlebred. |
| strong force | 2 | noun | (nuclear physics) The color force, a fundamental force that is associated with the strong bonds, created by the associated bosons known as gluons, between quarks and other subatomic particles. |
| gravitational force | 6 | noun | (physics) A very long-range, but relatively weak fundamental force of attraction that acts between all particles that have mass; believed to be mediated by gravitons. |
| torse | 1 | noun | (heraldry) A twist of cloth or wreath, typically placed underneath and forming part of a crest (as an orle or wreath) and customarily shown with six twists, the first tincture being the tincture of the field, the second the tincture of the metal, and so on; rarely, it occurs as a charge. |
| wild horse | 2 | noun | A feral horse. |
| scorse | 1 | noun | (obsolete) barter; exchange; trade |
| towel horse | 3 | noun | a rack consisting of one or more bars on which towels can be hung |
| light source | 2 | noun | A source of illumination. |
| moral force | 3 | noun | an efficient incentive |
| retarding force | 4 | noun | the phenomenon of resistance to motion through a fluid |
| bourse | 1 | noun | A stock exchange. |
| centrifugal force | 5 | noun | In everyday understanding, the effect that tends to move an object away from the center of a circle it is rotating about (a consequence of inertia). |
| outsource | 2 | verb | (chiefly US, business, management, transitive) To transfer the management or day-to-day execution of a business function to a third-party service provider. |
| sea horse | 2 | noun | Any of the small marine fish of the genus Hippocampus that have a horselike head and swim upright. |
| racehorse | 2 | noun | A horse that competes in races. |
| rocking horse | 3 | noun | a child’s toy consisting of a (usually wooden) horse mounted on a rocker or swing |
🎵 Near Rhymes for "Course"
50 wordsThese words don't rhyme perfectly but share a similar sound — great for slant rhyme and song lyrics.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| terse | 1 | (by extension) Of speech or style: brief, concise, to the point. | |
| coerce | 2 | verb | (transitive) To use force, threat, fraud, or intimidation in an attempt to compel one to act against their will. |
| fierce | 1 | Exceedingly violent, severe, ferocious, cruel or savage. | |
| diverse | 2 | verb | Consisting of different elements; various. |
| inverse | 2 | noun | Opposite in effect, nature or order. |
| perverse | 2 | noun | Morally wrong or evil; wicked; perverted. |
| sparse | 1 | verb | Not dense; meager; scanty |
| adverse | 2 | Unfavorable; antagonistic in purpose or effect; hostile; actively opposing one's interests or wishes; contrary to one's welfare; acting against; working in an opposing direction. | |
| disperse | 2 | verb | (transitive, intransitive) To scatter in different directions. |
| curse | 1 | noun | A prayer or imprecation that harm may befall someone. |
| farce | 1 | noun | (uncountable) A style of humor marked by broad improbabilities with little regard to regularity or method. |
| verse | 1 | noun | Poetic form in general. |
| immerse | 2 | verb | (transitive) To involve or engage deeply. |
| parse | 1 | noun | (computing, ambitransitive) To split (a file or other input) into pieces of data that can be easily manipulated or stored. |
| averse | 2 | verb | Having a repugnance or opposition of mind. |
| purse | 1 | noun | A small bag for carrying money. |
| reverse | 2 | noun | Opposite, contrary; going in the opposite direction. |
| arts | 1 | noun | The humanities. |
| nurse | 1 | noun | A person involved in providing direct care for the sick: |
| hearse | 1 | noun | A carriage or vehicle specially adapted or used for transporting a dead person to the place of funeral or to the grave. |
| burse | 1 | noun | A fund or foundation for the maintenance of the needy scholars in their studies. |
| vers | 1 | noun | (LGBTQ slang) Willing to take either a penetrative (top) or receptive (bottom) role in anal sex. |
| transverse | 2 | noun | Situated or lying across; side to side, relative to some defined "forward" direction; perpendicular or slanted relative to the "forward" direction; identified with movement across areas. |
| obverse | 2 | noun | The heads side of a coin, or the side of a medal or badge that has the principal design. |
| wet nurse | 2 | noun | A woman hired to suckle another woman's child. |
| sports | 1 | noun | Synonym of sport (“the class of physical activies; athletics”). |
| rehearse | 2 | verb | (ambitransitive) To practise by recitation or repetition in private for experiment and improvement, prior to a public representation, especially in theater. |
| submerse | 2 | verb | To submerge. |
| quartz | 1 | noun | (mineralogy) The most abundant mineral on the earth's surface, of chemical composition silicon dioxide, SiO₂. It occurs in a variety of forms, both crystalline and amorphous. Found in every environment. |
| private parts | 3 | noun | (euphemistic) Those parts of the human body commonly expected to be covered by clothing when in public; especially, the pubic area. |
| shorts | 1 | noun | Pants or trousers worn for sports or in warmer weather that do not go lower than the knees. |
| disburse | 2 | verb | (finance) To pay out, expend; usually from a public fund or treasury. |
| intersperse | 3 | verb | (transitive) To scatter or insert something into or among other things. |
| darts | 1 | noun | (games, sports) A game or sport in which darts are thrown at a board, and points are scored depending on where the darts land. |
| charts | 1 | noun | A map. |
| nonsense verse | 3 | a form of nonsense literature usually employing strong prosodic elements like rhythm and rhyme. | |
| worse | 1 | noun | More severely or seriously. |
| reimburse | 3 | verb | To compensate with payment; especially, to repay money spent on one's behalf. |
| parts | 1 | noun | (euphemistic) The genitals, short for private parts. |
| liberal arts | 4 | noun | The academic course of instruction intended to provide general knowledge and usually comprising the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social sciences, as opposed to professional or technical subjects. |
| free verse | 2 | noun | (uncountable) A poetic form divided into lines of no particular length or meter, without a rhyme scheme. |
| smarts | 1 | noun | (informal, chiefly US) intelligence; smartness |
| dry nurse | 2 | verb | To feed, attend, and bring up without suckling. |
| practical nurse | 4 | noun | A person who is certified to provide custodial care such as help in walking, bathing, and feeding. |
| beaux arts | 2 | noun | Alternative form of beaux-arts. [The fine arts, especially in reference to the widely imitated conventional type of art and architecture advocated at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris.] |
| deserts | 2 | noun | an outcome (good or bad) that is well deserved |
| sorts | 1 | noun | A general type. |
| registered nurse | 4 | noun | A professional nurse who is a licensed graduate of a university or college of nursing who has successfully passed an examination such as NCLEX-RN. |
| blank verse | 2 | noun | (poetry) A poetic form with regular meter, particularly iambic pentameter, but no fixed rhyme scheme. |
| warts | 1 | noun | (pathology) A type of deformed growth occurring on the skin caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV). |
✍️ How to Use These Rhymes
📝
Poetry
Perfect rhymes work best in traditional verse. Use near rhymes for modern free verse.
🎶
Song Lyrics
Near rhymes are common in pop and hip-hop. They keep lyrics natural and conversational.
🃏
Greeting Cards
Short perfect rhymes (1–2 syllables) feel warm and memorable in cards and captions.
🔢 Rhymes by Syllable Count
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rhymes with remorserhymes with coarserhymes with endorserhymes with sourcerhymes with enforcerhymes with concourserhymes with hoarserhymes with sexual intercourserhymes with horserhymes with reinforcerhymes with perforcerhymes with divorcerhymes with dark horserhymes with workforcerhymes with driving forcerhymes with morserhymes with workhorserhymes with clotheshorserhymes with vital forcerhymes with task force