🎯 Perfect Rhymes for "Hallelujah"
4 wordsThese words rhyme exactly with "hallelujah" — same ending sound.
🎵 Near Rhymes for "Hallelujah"
50 wordsThese words don't rhyme perfectly but share a similar sound — great for slant rhyme and song lyrics.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| frugal | 2 | Of something which is consumed (such as money, goods, etc.): Careful or wise in expenditure; avoiding waste. | |
| music | 2 | noun | A series of sounds organized in time, usually employing some combination of harmony, melody, rhythm, tempo, etc., often to convey a mood. |
| judas | 2 | noun | A traitor; a person not to be trusted. |
| doodle | 2 | noun | (ambitransitive) To draw or scribble aimlessly. |
| duel | 2 | noun | Arranged, regular combat between two private persons, often over a matter of honor. |
| puma | 2 | noun | A mountain lion or cougar (Puma concolor). |
| lollapalooza | 5 | noun | (informal) An outstanding, extreme, or outrageous example of its kind. |
| pooja | 2 | noun | A female given name from Hindi. |
| tulip | 2 | noun | The flower of this plant. |
| bazooka | 3 | noun | (weaponry) A shoulder-held rocket launcher used as an antitank weapon, developed by America during World War II and so-called from its resemblance to the bazooka musical instrument. |
| moola | 2 | noun | (informal) Money, cash. |
| doodah | 2 | noun | (informal) poop |
| proven | 2 | Having been proved; having proved its value or truth. | |
| moolah | 2 | noun | Alternative spelling of moola (“money”). [(informal) Money, cash.] |
| buddha | 2 | noun | Siddhartha Gautama, the Nepali prince and Indian philosopher and teacher who founded Buddhism. |
| medusa | 3 | noun | (Greek mythology) The youngest and only mortal of the three gorgon sisters, killed by Perseus. |
| barracuda | 4 | noun | Any large marine fish of the genus Sphyraena that have elongated bodies, a projecting lower jaw, displaying prominent fang-shaped teeth, and are aggressive predators. |
| scuba | 2 | noun | (underwater diving) An apparatus carried by a diver, which includes a tank holding compressed, filtered air and a regulator which delivers the air to the diver at ambient pressure which can be used underwater. |
| hula | 2 | noun | A form of chant and dance, which was developed in the Hawaiian Islands by the Polynesians who originally settled there. |
| loofah | 2 | noun | The dried fibrous interior of such a plant, used as a sponge for bathing. |
| una | 2 | noun | A female given name from Irish. |
| schmoozer | 2 | noun | One who schmoozes. |
| mula | 2 | noun | A surname. |
| abdulla | 3 | noun | A surname. |
| aruba | 3 | noun | An island, dependent territory, and constituent country of the Netherlands, in the Caribbean Sea. |
| bermuda | 3 | noun | An archipelago and overseas territory of the United Kingdom in the North Atlantic Ocean, 580 nautical miles (1074 kilometers) east-southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. |
| beulah | 2 | noun | A female given name from Hebrew. |
| chattanooga | 4 | noun | A city, the county seat of Hamilton County, Tennessee, near the border with Georgia. |
| chua | 2 | noun | A surname from Hokkien. |
| cuba | 2 | noun | A country, the largest island (based on land area) in the Caribbean. Capital and largest city: Havana. |
| fortuna | 3 | noun | (Roman mythology) The Roman goddess of luck, fortune and fate, equivalent to the Greek goddess Tyche. |
| 2 | noun | (transitive) To search for (something) on the Internet using the Google search engine. | |
| human | 2 | noun | (not comparable) Of or belonging to the species Homo sapiens or its closest relatives. |
| judah | 2 | noun | (biblical) One of the Israelite tribes, and, according to some Abrahamic religions, descended from Judah, and from which David and his lineage came. |
| julia | 2 | noun | A female given name from Latin. |
| lua | 2 | noun | A lightweight programming language with dynamic typing. |
| lula | 2 | noun | A female given name. |
| luna | 2 | noun | (entomology) A luna moth: a member of species Actias luna. |
| montezuma | 4 | noun | Moctezuma II (1466–1520), the Aztec emperor at the time of the Spanish conquest. |
| oona | 2 | noun | A female given name from Irish. |
| pascagoula | 4 | noun | A city, the county seat of Jackson County, Mississippi, United States. |
| petaluma | 4 | noun | A city in Sonoma County, California, United States. |
| rula | 2 | noun | — |
| truman | 2 | noun | A male given name. |
| tuba | 2 | noun | A large brass musical instrument, usually in the bass range, played through a vibration of the lips upon the mouthpiece and fingering of the keys. |
| tula | 2 | noun | A city, the administrative center of Tula Oblast, Russia, 165 km south of Moscow. |
| tuna | 2 | noun | Any of several species of fish of the genus Thunnus in the family Scombridae. |
| union | 2 | noun | (countable) The act of uniting or joining two or more things into one. |
| uva | 2 | noun | A surname. |
| yuba | 2 | noun | Dried tofu skin; the film that forms on top of a vat of boiling soy milk. |
✍️ 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
Match syllable counts to keep your poem's meter consistent.
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