🎯 Perfect Rhymes for "Morter"
50 wordsThese words rhyme exactly with "morter" — same ending sound.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| supporter | 3 | noun | A person who gives support to someone or something. |
| quarter | 2 | noun | A fourth part of something. |
| mortar | 2 | noun | (uncountable) A mixture of lime or cement, sand and water used for bonding building blocks. |
| transporter | 3 | noun | One who, or that which transports. |
| thwarter | 2 | noun | A person or thing that thwarts. |
| snorter | 2 | noun | One who snorts. |
| shorter | 2 | noun | (colloquial) A short, a short seller: one who engages in short selling. |
| last quarter | 3 | noun | (astronomy) The waning lunar phase halfway between full moon and new moon. |
| reporter | 3 | noun | A journalist who investigates, edits and reports news stories for newspapers, radio and television. |
| sorter | 2 | noun | A machine or algorithm that performs sorting. |
| first quarter | 3 | noun | (astronomy) The waxing lunar phase, from new moon to half way between new moon and full moon. |
| draw and quarter | 4 | verb | (transitive, figurative) To severely punish or criticize someone. |
| importer | 3 | noun | One who, or that which, imports: especially a person or company importing goods into a country. |
| exporter | 3 | noun | One who, or that which, exports: especially a person who or organization that exports or sells goods made in one country for delivery in another country. |
| bricks and mortar | 4 | noun | Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see bricks, and, mortar. |
| athletic supporter | 6 | noun | An elastic garment supporting and defending male genitalia from modest injury. A jock strap. |
| hindquarter | 3 | noun | Either rear half of a side of beef, mutton, veal, lamb or by extension from another edible mammal. |
| trench mortar | 3 | noun | A small mortar designed to fire shells from one trench to an enemy trench. |
| headquarter | 3 | verb | (US, intransitive) To establish headquarters. |
| hall porter | 3 | noun | A hotel worker who carries luggage to the rooms of guests. |
| night porter | 3 | A night porter is a porter who is on duty during the night. | |
| pullman porter | 4 | Pullman porters were men hired to work for the railroads as porters on sleeping cars. | |
| television reporter | 7 | noun | someone who reports news stories via television |
| every quarter | 5 | in three month intervals | |
| tv reporter | 5 | noun | someone who reports news stories via television |
| wool sorter | 3 | noun | Alternative form of woolsorter. [A worker, usually a farmworker, responsible for sorting wool into coarser and finer grades.] |
| abort her | 3 | — | |
| airporter | 3 | noun | A form of transportation that uses shuttlebuses or vans to connect passengers to and from airports and other transportation hubs for a fee. |
| athwart her | 3 | — | |
| contort her | 3 | — | |
| corter | 2 | noun | A surname. |
| court her | 2 | — | |
| courter | 2 | noun | One who courts; one who plays the lover, or solicits in marriage. |
| deport her | 3 | — | |
| distort her | 3 | — | |
| escort her | 3 | — | |
| exhort her | 3 | — | |
| fourthquarter | 3 | — | |
| gorter | 2 | noun | — |
| horter | 2 | noun | — |
| import her | 3 | — | |
| latin quarter | 4 | noun | A neighborhood of Paris, France, around the Sorbonne. |
| mcwhorter | 3 | noun | A surname from Scottish Gaelic. |
| por ter | 2 | — | |
| port her | 2 | — | |
| porter | 2 | noun | A person who carries luggage and related objects. |
| puerto | 2 | noun | A surname from Spanish. |
| report her | 3 | — | |
| short her | 2 | — | |
| sort her | 2 | — |
🎵 Near Rhymes for "Morter"
50 wordsThese words don't rhyme perfectly but share a similar sound — great for slant rhyme and song lyrics.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| ardor | 2 | noun | Great warmth of feeling; fervor; passion. |
| order | 2 | noun | (countable) A command. |
| alter | 2 | verb | (ambitransitive) To change the form or structure of. |
| ardour | 2 | noun | British, Canada, and Australia spelling of ardor. |
| torpor | 2 | noun | A state of being inactive or stuporous. |
| forward | 2 | verb | (not comparable) Situated toward or at the front of something. |
| tartar | 2 | noun | A hard yellow deposit on the teeth, formed from dental plaque. |
| arbor | 2 | noun | A shady sitting place or pergola usually in a park or garden, surrounded by climbing shrubs, vines or other vegetation. |
| border | 2 | noun | The line or frontier area separating political or geographical regions. |
| martyr | 2 | noun | One who willingly accepts being put to death or willingly accepts challenging and exposing iniquity done to oneself for adhering openly to one's religious beliefs; notably, saints canonized after red martyrdom. |
| in order | 3 | In a sequence. | |
| corner | 2 | noun | The point where two converging lines meet; an angle, either external or internal. |
| water | 2 | noun | A barangay of Baco, Oriental Mindoro, Philippines (unconfirmed). |
| disorder | 3 | noun | Absence of order; state of not being arranged in an orderly manner. |
| torture | 2 | noun | The infliction of severe pain or anguish, especially as an interrogation technique or punishment; (usually in the plural) a technique, method, or device which is designed to inflict such anguish. |
| father | 2 | noun | A male parent, especially of a human; a male who parents a child (which he has sired, adopted, fostered, taken as his own, etc.). |
| daughter | 2 | noun | One’s female offspring. |
| starter | 2 | noun | Someone who starts, or who starts something. |
| orchard | 2 | noun | A garden or an area of land for the cultivation of fruit or nut trees. |
| slaughter | 2 | noun | (uncountable) The killing of animals, generally for food. |
| forebear | 2 | noun | An ancestor. |
| supporters | 3 | noun | A person who gives support to someone or something. |
| marker | 2 | noun | Someone or something that creates marks, particularly |
| barter | 2 | noun | An exchange of goods or services without the use of money. |
| murder | 2 | noun | (uncountable) The crime of killing a person unlawfully, especially with predetermination. |
| sorta | 2 | (informal) Contraction of sort of. [(informal) Sometimes expressing hesitation, reluctance, etc.: to some extent but not entirely; approximately, in a way, not quite, somewhat.] | |
| aorta | 3 | noun | (anatomy) The great artery which carries the blood from the heart to all parts of the body except the lungs; the main trunk of the arterial system. |
| girder | 2 | noun | A beam of steel, wood, or reinforced concrete, used as a main horizontal support in a building or structure. |
| worker | 2 | noun | One who works: a person who performs labor for a living; traditionally, especially, manual labor. |
| arbour | 2 | noun | UK standard spelling of arbor. |
| horror | 2 | noun | (countable, uncountable) An intense distressing emotion of fear or repugnance. |
| larder | 2 | noun | A food supply. |
| forger | 2 | noun | A person who creates forgeries, falsifies documents with intent to defraud, e.g. to create a false will or illicit copies of currency; counterfeiter. |
| harper | 2 | noun | A harpist, especially one who plays a traditional harp without pedals. |
| harder | 2 | noun | A surname. |
| orders | 2 | noun | A surname |
| nonstarter | 3 | noun | A project that has no chance of success. |
| recorder | 3 | noun | (music) A musical instrument of the woodwind family; a type of fipple flute, a simple internal duct flute. |
| barber | 2 | noun | A person whose profession is cutting the hair and beards of usually male customers. |
| garter | 2 | noun | A band worn around the leg to hold up a sock or stocking. |
| walker | 2 | noun | The agent noun of to walk: a person who walks or a thing which walks, especially a pedestrian or a participant in a walking race. |
| barker | 2 | noun | A person employed to solicit customers by calling out to passersby, e.g. at a carnival. |
| porker | 2 | noun | A pig, especially a castrated male, being fattened and raised for slaughter. |
| absorber | 3 | noun | Something that absorbs. |
| carter | 2 | noun | Jimmy Carter, 39th President of the United States of America |
| safe harbor | 3 | noun | A safe haven. |
| borders | 2 | noun | Scottish Borders |
| shorty | 2 | noun | (informal) Something or someone that is shorter than normal. |
| coworker | 3 | noun | Somebody with whom one works. |
| faulter | 2 | verb | (obsolete) One who commits a fault. |
✍️ 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.
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Greeting Cards
Short perfect rhymes (1–2 syllables) feel warm and memorable in cards and captions.
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🔗 Explore More Rhymes
rhymes with supporterrhymes with quarterrhymes with mortarrhymes with transporterrhymes with thwarterrhymes with snorterrhymes with shorterrhymes with last quarterrhymes with reporterrhymes with sorterrhymes with first quarterrhymes with draw and quarterrhymes with importerrhymes with exporterrhymes with bricks and mortarrhymes with athletic supporterrhymes with hindquarterrhymes with trench mortarrhymes with headquarterrhymes with hall porter