🎯 Perfect Rhymes for "Exposition"
50 wordsThese words rhyme exactly with "exposition" — same ending sound.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| disposition | 4 | noun | Tendency or inclination under given circumstances. |
| cognition | 3 | noun | The process of knowing, of acquiring knowledge and understanding through thought and through the senses. |
| ambition | 3 | noun | (uncountable, countable) Eager or inordinate desire for some object that confers distinction, as preferment, honor, superiority, political power, or fame; desire to distinguish one's self from other people. |
| erudition | 4 | noun | Profound knowledge acquired from learning and scholarship. |
| admonition | 4 | noun | A rebuke by an authority that one has erred and should not persist in one's actions. |
| volition | 3 | noun | The mental power or ability of choosing; the will. |
| composition | 4 | noun | A work of music, literature or art. |
| recognition | 4 | noun | The act of recognizing or the condition of being recognized (matching a current observation with a memory of a prior observation of the same entity). |
| juxtaposition | 5 | noun | The nearness of objects with little or no delimiter. |
| apparition | 4 | noun | An unexpected, wonderful, or preternatural appearance; especially, one by a ghost, phantom, or suchlike; the entity itself. |
| position | 3 | noun | A place or location. |
| acquisition | 4 | noun | The act or process of acquiring. |
| contrition | 3 | noun | The state of being contrite; sincere penitence or remorse. |
| opposition | 4 | noun | The action of opposing or of being in conflict. |
| expedition | 4 | noun | A trip, especially a long one, made by a person or a group of people for a specific purpose. |
| proposition | 4 | noun | (countable) An idea, plan, or suggestion offered. |
| attrition | 3 | noun | A gradual reduction in number. |
| intuition | 4 | noun | Immediate cognition without the use of conscious rational processes. |
| supposition | 4 | noun | Something that is supposed; an assumption made to account for known facts, conjecture. |
| rendition | 3 | noun | An interpretation or performance of an artwork, especially a musical score or musical work. |
| submission | 3 | noun | The act of submitting or giving e.g. a completed piece of work. |
| suspicion | 3 | noun | The act of suspecting something or someone, especially of something wrong. |
| premonition | 4 | noun | A strong intuition that something is about to happen (usually something negative, but not exclusively). |
| condition | 3 | noun | A state or quality. |
| fruition | 3 | noun | The fulfillment of something worked for. |
| partition | 3 | noun | An action which divides a thing into parts, or separates one thing from another. |
| commission | 3 | noun | A fee charged by an agent or broker for carrying out a transaction. |
| mission | 2 | noun | (countable) A set of tasks that fulfills a purpose or duty; an assignment set by an employer, or by oneself. |
| petition | 3 | noun | A formal written request made by an individual or a group of people to a sovereign or political authority, often containing many signatures, soliciting some grace, right, mercy, or the redress of some wrong or grievance. |
| exhibition | 4 | noun | A large-scale public showing of objects or products. |
| transition | 3 | noun | The process of change from one form, state, style or place to another. |
| definition | 4 | noun | (semantics, lexicography) A statement of the meaning of a word, word group, sign, or symbol; especially, a dictionary definition. |
| sedition | 3 | noun | Organized incitement of rebellion or civil disorder against authority or the state, usually by speech or writing. |
| inhibition | 4 | noun | The act of inhibiting. |
| requisition | 4 | noun | A formal request for something. |
| demolition | 4 | noun | The process of demolishing or destroying buildings or other structures. |
| tradition | 3 | noun | A part of culture that is passed from person to person or generation to generation, possibly differing in detail from family to family, such as the way to celebrate holidays. |
| repetition | 4 | noun | The act or an instance of repeating or being repeated. |
| competition | 4 | noun | (uncountable) The action of competing. |
| admission | 3 | noun | Permission to enter, or the entrance itself; admittance; entrance; access |
| intermission | 4 | noun | A break, especially between two performances or sessions, such as at a concert, play, seminar, or religious assembly. |
| imposition | 4 | noun | The act of imposing, laying on, affixing, enjoining, inflicting, obtruding, and the like. |
| remission | 3 | noun | (medicine) An abatement or lessening of the manifestations of a disease; a period where the symptoms of a disease are absent. |
| transmission | 3 | noun | The act of transmitting, e.g. data (signals) or electric power. |
| omission | 3 | noun | (uncountable) The act of omitting. |
| precondition | 4 | noun | A condition that requires satisfaction before taking a course of action. |
| rhetorician | 4 | noun | An orator or eloquent public speaker. |
| presupposition | 5 | noun | (linguistics) An assumption or belief implicit in an utterance or other use of language. |
| reposition | 4 | verb | To put into a new position |
| in addition | 4 | (conjunctive, idiomatic) Also; as well; besides. |
🎵 Near Rhymes for "Exposition"
50 wordsThese words don't rhyme perfectly but share a similar sound — great for slant rhyme and song lyrics.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| connection | 3 | noun | A feeling of understanding and ease of communication between two or more people. |
| derision | 3 | noun | Act of treating with disdain. |
| expression | 3 | noun | The action of expressing thoughts, ideas, feelings, etc. |
| driven | 2 | Obsessed; passionately motivated to achieve goals. | |
| provision | 3 | noun | An item of goods or supplies, especially food, obtained for future use. |
| induction | 3 | noun | An act of inducting. |
| riven | 2 | Torn apart. | |
| tension | 2 | noun | The condition of being held in a state between two or more forces, which are acting in opposition to each other. |
| vision | 2 | noun | (uncountable) The sense or ability of sight. |
| mischief | 2 | noun | (uncountable) Conduct that playfully causes petty annoyance. |
| envision | 3 | verb | (transitive) To conceive or see something within one's mind. To imagine. |
| precision | 3 | noun | (loosely) The state of being precise or exact; especially, both exact and accurate. |
| glisten | 2 | verb | (intransitive, of a wet or greasy surface) To reflect light with a glittering luster; to sparkle, coruscate, glint or flash. |
| opinion | 3 | noun | A belief, judgment or perspective that a person has formed, either through objective or subjective reasoning, about a topic, issue, person or thing. |
| description | 3 | noun | A sketch or account of anything in words; a portraiture or representation in language; an enumeration of the essential qualities of a thing or species. |
| excision | 3 | noun | (surgery) The removal of something (a tumor or body part) by cutting. |
| division | 3 | noun | (uncountable) The act or process of dividing anything. |
| diction | 2 | noun | Choice and use of words, especially with regard to effective communication. |
| decision | 3 | noun | The act of deciding. |
| give in | 2 | verb | (idiomatic) To relent, yield, surrender or admit defeat. |
| villain | 2 | noun | (fiction) A character who has the role of being bad, especially antagonizing the hero; an antagonist who is also evil or malevolent. |
| incision | 3 | noun | A cut, especially one made by a scalpel or similar medical tool in the context of surgical operation; the scar resulting from such a cut. |
| misprision | 3 | noun | (law, chiefly historical) (uncountable) Criminal neglect or wrongful execution of duty, especially by a public official; (countable) a specific instance of this. |
| collision | 3 | noun | (physics) Any event in which two or more bodies exert forces on each other in a relatively short time. In a collision, physical contact of two bodies is not necessary. |
| listen | 2 | verb | (intransitive except in archaic usage) To use one's sense of hearing and auditory cognition in an intentional way; to make deliberate use of one's ears; to pay attention to or wait for a specific sound. |
| revision | 3 | noun | The action or process of reviewing, editing and amending. |
| supervision | 4 | noun | (uncountable) The act or instance of supervising. |
| indecision | 4 | noun | The inability to decide on a course of action, especially if two or more possibilities exist. |
| resurrection | 4 | noun | The act of arising from the dead and becoming alive again. |
| prediction | 3 | noun | A statement of what will happen in the future. |
| christen | 2 | noun | (transitive, by extension) To name. |
| recision | 3 | noun | The act of cutting off. |
| swishing | 2 | noun | The sound of fabric or fur moving in the air. |
| circumcision | 4 | noun | The surgical excision of the foreskin and usually all or most of the penile frenulum. |
| infection | 3 | noun | An uncontrolled growth of harmful microorganisms in a host. |
| fiction | 2 | noun | (literature) Literary type using invented or imaginative writing, instead of real facts, usually written as prose. |
| rescission | 3 | noun | (law) The undoing of a contract; repeal. |
| night vision | 3 | noun | Vision that works, to one degree or another, in the low-light conditions of night. |
| forgiven | 3 | verb | (transitive) To pardon (someone); to waive any negative feeling towards or desire for punishment or retribution against. |
| prison | 2 | noun | A place or institution where people are held against their will, in the US especially for long-term confinement, as of those convicted of serious crimes or otherwise considered undesirable by the government. |
| introduction | 4 | noun | The act or process of introducing. |
| imprison | 3 | verb | (transitive) To put in or as if in prison; confine somebody against their will. |
| ballistic | 3 | (comparable) Of or relating to projectiles moving under their own momentum, aerodynamic drag, gravity, and sometimes rocket power, without significant lift. | |
| injection | 3 | noun | The act of injecting, or something that is injected. |
| television | 4 | noun | (uncountable, broadcasting) An electronic communication medium that allows the transmission of real-time visual images, and often sound. |
| stiffen | 2 | verb | (intransitive) To become stiff. |
| singing | 2 | noun | The act of using the voice to produce musical sounds; vocalizing. |
| split decision | 4 | noun | (competitive fighting) an outcome in several full-contact combat sports where two of the three judges score for the same fighter as the winner, while the third judge scores for the other fighter. |
| arisen | 3 | verb | (intransitive) To come up from one's bed or place of repose; to get up. |
| metric system | 4 | noun | The modern version of that system, Système International d'Unités (International System of Units), or SI that is based on the base units of the meter/metre, the kilogram, the second, the ampere, the kelvin, the mole, and the candela. |
✍️ 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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🔗 Explore More Rhymes
rhymes with dispositionrhymes with cognitionrhymes with ambitionrhymes with eruditionrhymes with admonitionrhymes with volitionrhymes with compositionrhymes with recognitionrhymes with juxtapositionrhymes with apparitionrhymes with positionrhymes with acquisitionrhymes with contritionrhymes with oppositionrhymes with expeditionrhymes with propositionrhymes with attritionrhymes with intuitionrhymes with suppositionrhymes with rendition