🎯 Perfect Rhymes for "Nights"
50 wordsThese words rhyme exactly with "nights" — same ending sound.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| plights | 1 | noun | A dire or unfortunate situation. |
| insights | 2 | the fourth studio recording of the Toshiko Akiyoshi – Lew Tabackin Big Band and was voted "Jazz Album of the Year" in the 1978 Down Beat magazine critic's poll. | |
| rights | 1 | legal, social, or ethical principles of freedom or entitlement; that is, rights are the fundamental normative rules about what is allowed of people or owed to people according to some legal system, social convention, or ethical theory. | |
| ignites | 2 | verb | (transitive) to set fire to (something), to light (something) |
| acolytes | 3 | a 2008 Australian horror thriller film directed by Jon Hewitt. | |
| civil rights | 3 | noun | (US) Those rights which are guaranteed protection by the US Constitution and are considered to be unquestionable, deserved by all people under all circumstances, especially without regard to race, creed, religion, sexual orientation, gender, and disability. |
| sights | 1 | noun | (in the singular) The ability to see. |
| sites | 1 | noun | (Internet) A website. |
| highlights | 2 | noun | Summary of an event, such as a sporting event, focussing on the most entertaining or consequential aspects; compilation of each highlight of that event |
| mites | 1 | MITES, or MIT Introduction to Engineering and Science, is a highly selective six-week summer program for rising high school seniors held at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. | |
| incites | 2 | verb | That which incites; an inciting agent or cause; a stimulant. |
| writes | 1 | verb | (ambitransitive) To form letters, words or symbols on a surface in order to communicate. |
| blights | 1 | noun | (figurative) Something that impedes development or growth, or spoils any other aspect of life. |
| delights | 2 | noun | Joy; pleasure. |
| whites | 1 | noun | A set of white clothes, especially as a uniform. |
| tights | 1 | noun | A close-fitting, sheer or non-sheer skin-tight garment worn principally by women and girls that covers the body completely from the waist down, usually including the feet. |
| footlights | 2 | The Cambridge Footlights, commonly referred to simply as Footlights, is a student sketch comedy troupe located in Cambridge, England. | |
| bites | 1 | noun | (mathematics, computing) A binary digit, generally represented as a 1 or 0. |
| daylights | 2 | noun | (colloquial) Mental soundness; wits; consciousness. |
| floodlights | 2 | noun | (chiefly in the plural) Powerful artificial illumination with a broad beam, especially in a series of units on pylons used to illuminate a sports ground. |
| sulfites | 2 | noun | (American spelling, inorganic chemistry) Any salt of sulfurous acid. |
| ammonites | 3 | noun | (paleontology) Any of an extinct group of cephalopods of the subclass Ammonoidea; a fossil shell of such an animal. |
| appetites | 3 | noun | A desire to eat food or consume drinks. |
| flights | 1 | an English alternative/progressive rock band formed in May 2010 in Bristol. | |
| invites | 2 | verb | (transitive) To ask for the presence or participation of someone or something. |
| dogfights | 2 | noun | (aviation, military) A twisting turning battle between two or more military aircraft, especially between fighters. |
| fortnights | 2 | noun | (chiefly UK, Ireland, Commonwealth, dated in North America) A period of 2 weeks. |
| urbanites | 3 | noun | Someone who lives in a city or similar urban area. |
| lights | 1 | noun | The lungs, now chiefly of an animal (being lighter than adjacent parts). |
| special drawing rights | 5 | (SDRs, code ) supplementary foreign exchange reserve assets defined and maintained by the International Monetary Fund. | |
| lymphocytes | 3 | noun | (cytology, immunology) Any of several types of white blood cell with a spherical nucleus occurring in the lymphatic system, including B cells, T cells and natural killer cells. |
| last rites | 2 | noun | The Catholic sacrament of Anointing of the Sick. |
| southern lights | 3 | noun | The aurora of the southern hemisphere. |
| by rights | 2 | with reason or justice | |
| uprights | 2 | noun | (American football, rugby) Vertical (upright) posts of the goal. |
| brights | 1 | noun | Bold or vivid colours; also, clothes, cosmetics, etc., with such colours. |
| parasites | 3 | an American pop-punk band. | |
| copyrights | 3 | noun | (uncountable) The right by law to be the entity which determines who may publish, copy and distribute a piece of writing, music, picture or other work of authorship. |
| phagocytes | 3 | noun | (cytology) A cell of the immune system, such as a neutrophil, macrophage or dendritic cell, that engulfs and destroys viruses, bacteria and waste materials, or in the case of mature dendritic cells; displays antigens from invading pathogens to cells of the lymphoid lineage. |
| satellites | 3 | "Satellites" is the first single by Petra Marklund (performing as September) from her second album In Orbit, and is the first single released under her contract with Catchy Tunes. | |
| bytes | 1 | the debut studio album by the English electronic music group the Black Dog, credited under the name Black Dog Productions. | |
| luddites | 2 | noun | (by extension, often derogatory) Someone who opposes technological change. |
| spotlights | 2 | noun | (figurative) The center of attention; the highlight or most important part. |
| unites | 2 | verb | (transitive) To bring together as one. |
| extradites | 3 | verb | (transitive) To remove a person from one state to another by legal process. |
| gigabytes | 3 | noun | (computing, formal) One billion (10⁹, or 1,000,000,000) bytes or 1,000 megabytes. |
| headlights | 2 | noun | A bright light, with a lens and reflector, on the front of a motor vehicle (or originally a ship or train), designed to illuminate the road when driving at night; normally one of a pair. |
| jacobites | 3 | noun | (historical) A supporter of the restoration of the Stuart kings to the thrones of England and Scotland in the late 17th century. [from 17th c.] |
| commission on human rights | 7 | noun | the commission of the economic and social council of the united nations that is concerned with human rights |
| neophytes | 3 | noun | A beginner; a person who is new to a subject, skill, or belief. |
🎵 Near Rhymes for "Nights"
50 wordsThese words don't rhyme perfectly but share a similar sound — great for slant rhyme and song lyrics.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| concise | 2 | verb | Brief, yet including all important information. |
| nice | 1 | verb | (chiefly informal) Pleasant, satisfactory. |
| vice | 1 | noun | Bad or immoral behaviour. |
| devise | 2 | verb | (transitive) To use one’s intellect to plan or design (something). |
| precise | 2 | verb | (loosely) Both exact and accurate. |
| entice | 2 | verb | (transitive) To lure; to attract by arousing desire or hope. |
| advice | 2 | noun | (uncountable) An opinion offered to guide behavior in an effort to be helpful. |
| device | 2 | noun | Any piece of equipment made for a particular purpose, especially a mechanical or electrical one. |
| suffice | 2 | verb | (intransitive) To be enough or sufficient; to meet the need (of anything); to be adequate; to be good enough. |
| ice | 1 | noun | Water in frozen (solid) form. |
| slice | 1 | noun | A thin, broad piece cut off. |
| splice | 1 | noun | To unite, as two ropes, or parts of a rope, by a particular manner of interweaving the strands, the union being between two ends, or between an end and the body of a rope. |
| excise | 2 | noun | To cut out; to remove. |
| dice | 1 | noun | (uncountable) Gaming with one or more dice. |
| spice | 1 | noun | (countable, uncountable) Aromatic or pungent plant matter (usually dried) used to season or flavor food. |
| water ice | 3 | noun | (sciences, retronym, uncountable) Ice in everyday language, namely ice made of frozen water; water in a solid physical state, especially when distinguished from other frozen substances. |
| rice | 1 | noun | (uncountable) The seeds of this plant used as food. |
| bice | 1 | noun | A pale blue pigment, prepared from the native blue carbonate of copper, or from smalt. |
| twice | 1 | Two times. | |
| market price | 3 | noun | (economics) The price at which a product, financial instrument, service or other tradable item can be bought and sold at an open market; the going price. |
| pack ice | 2 | noun | A large consolidated mass of floating sea ice. |
| mice | 1 | verb | (Bermuda, chiefly in the form micin) To be distracted or inattentive (possibly alluding to a cat being distracted by a mouse). |
| dry ice | 2 | noun | Carbon dioxide frozen in the solid state, used especially as a cooling agent and for the production of fog-like special effects. It sublimes at −78.5 °C (−109.3 °F) at normal atmospheric pressure. |
| gneiss | 1 | noun | (geology) A common and widely-distributed metamorphic rock having bands or veins, but not schistose. |
| thrice | 1 | (somewhat dated outside Asia, Canada, Australia and New Zealand) Three times. | |
| bid price | 2 | noun | (finance) The price offered by a potential buyer when bidding for goods. |
| asking price | 3 | noun | (finance) The list price or sticker price of an item; the price without any discounts or incentives. |
| list price | 2 | noun | (business) The retail selling price of an item, as recommended by the manufacturer or retail distributor, or as listed in a catalog. |
| wild rice | 2 | noun | Rice of any of four species of grasses which form the genus Zizania, which have edible grains and edible stems. |
| brown rice | 2 | noun | Rice with the brownish hull not polished off as in white rice. The hull contains important vitamins, including vitamin B complex, which are missing in white rice. |
| purchase price | 3 | noun | (management, accounting) The price at which something is actually purchased, especially from the point of view of the purchaser. |
| upset price | 3 | noun | The lowest price at which an auction item may be sold. |
| bride price | 2 | noun | In some cultures, a sum of money or other valuables paid by a bridegroom or on his behalf to the family of the bride. |
| closing price | 3 | noun | (stock market) the price of the last transaction completed during a day's trading session |
| drift ice | 2 | noun | One or more floating slabs of ice which have become detached from larger sheets or shoreline glaciers and which are moved by wind or sea currents. |
| selling price | 3 | noun | (business) The price at which an item is sold. |
| fish slice | 2 | noun | (British) A kitchen utensil used to turn foodstuffs (commonly, burgers and omelettes) in a frying pan; a spatula. |
| overprice | 3 | verb | to give a commodity an excessive price |
| shelf ice | 2 | noun | Ice that forms when part of a lake freezes. |
| peripheral device | 6 | noun | (computer hardware) An electronic device that is outside the computer's system unit (external to the computer's enclosing case), but used by the computer to which it is connected, such as a printer or a scanner. |
| storage device | 4 | noun | (computer hardware) A piece of hardware whose main function is to store data. |
| cut price | 2 | noun | a price below the standard price |
| flotation device | 5 | noun | rescue equipment consisting of a buoyant belt or jacket to keep a person from drowning |
| white rice | 2 | noun | Rice which has had the brownish hull polished off, leaving a white-colored grain. |
| lice | 1 | noun | (proscribed) louse |
| offer price | 3 | noun | (stock market) the price at which a broker is willing to sell a certain security |
| price | 1 | noun | The cost required to gain possession of something. |
| spanish rice | 3 | noun | Synonym of Mexican rice. |
| tice | 1 | noun | (transitive, obsolete) To entice (someone). |
| trice | 1 | noun | Now only in the phrase in a trice: a very short time; the blink of an eye, an instant, a moment. |
✍️ 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.
2 syllables
3 syllables
5 syllables
7 syllables
Translate “Nights” into Another Language
Pick a language — the word will be pre-filled in the translator.
🔗 Explore More Rhymes
rhymes with plightsrhymes with insightsrhymes with rightsrhymes with ignitesrhymes with acolytesrhymes with civil rightsrhymes with sightsrhymes with sitesrhymes with highlightsrhymes with mitesrhymes with incitesrhymes with writesrhymes with blightsrhymes with delightsrhymes with whitesrhymes with tightsrhymes with footlightsrhymes with bitesrhymes with daylightsrhymes with floodlights