🎯 Perfect Rhymes for "Reassertion"
14 wordsThese words rhyme exactly with "reassertion" — same ending sound.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| assertion | 3 | noun | The act of asserting; positive declaration or averment. |
| coercion | 3 | noun | (uncountable) Actual or threatened force for the purpose of compelling action by another person; the act of coercing. |
| exertion | 3 | noun | An expenditure of physical or mental effort. |
| desertion | 3 | noun | The act of deserting. |
| insertion | 3 | noun | The act of inserting, or something inserted. |
| tertian | 2 | noun | (medicine, of a fever) Characterised by paroxysms recurring every other day (that is, every third day by inclusive reckoning). |
| cistercian | 3 | noun | A member of a monastic order which follows the Benedictine rule and emphasizes silent contemplative prayer. |
| gershon | 2 | noun | A surname. |
| hersh in | 2 | — | |
| hirsch in | 2 | — | |
| inertia in | 3 | — | |
| kirsch in | 2 | — | |
| mershon | 2 | noun | A surname. |
| physical exertion | 6 | noun | the activity of exerting your muscles in various ways to keep fit |
🎵 Near Rhymes for "Reassertion"
49 wordsThese words don't rhyme perfectly but share a similar sound — great for slant rhyme and song lyrics.
| Word | Syllables | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|---|
| aversion | 3 | noun | Opposition or repugnance of mind; fixed dislike often without any conscious reasoning. |
| excursion | 3 | noun | A brief recreational trip; a journey out of the usual way. |
| incursion | 3 | noun | An aggressive movement into somewhere; an invasion in the general sense. |
| portion | 2 | noun | An allocated amount. |
| reversion | 3 | noun | The action of returning to a former condition or practice. |
| aspersion | 3 | noun | An attack on somebody's reputation or good name, often in the phrase to cast aspersions upon…. |
| dispersion | 3 | noun | The state of being dispersed. |
| immersion | 3 | noun | The act of immersing or the condition of being immersed. |
| version | 2 | noun | A specific form or variation of something. |
| diversion | 3 | noun | A hobby; an activity that distracts the mind. |
| extortion | 3 | noun | The practice of extorting money or other property by the use of force or threats. |
| perversion | 3 | noun | The state of being perverted; depravity; vice. |
| conversion | 3 | noun | The act of converting something or someone. |
| torsion | 2 | noun | The act of turning or twisting, or the state of being twisted; the twisting or wrenching of a body by the exertion of a lateral force tending to turn one end or part of it about a longitudinal axis, while the other is held fast or turned in the opposite direction. |
| inversion | 3 | noun | The action of inverting. |
| distortion | 3 | noun | A misrepresentation of the truth. |
| contortion | 3 | noun | The act of contorting, twisting or deforming something, especially oneself. |
| orphan | 2 | noun | A person, especially a minor, both or (rarely) one of whose parents have died. |
| proportion | 3 | noun | (countable) A quantity of something that is part of the whole amount or number. |
| arson | 2 | noun | The crime of deliberately starting a fire with intent to cause damage. |
| apportion | 3 | verb | (transitive) To divide and distribute portions of a whole. |
| worsen | 2 | verb | (intransitive) To become worse; to get worse. |
| subversion | 3 | noun | A systematic attempt to overthrow a government by working from within; undermining. |
| submersion | 3 | noun | The act of submerging, or the state of being submerged; immersion |
| abortion | 3 | noun | An induced abortion. |
| parson | 2 | noun | An Anglican cleric having full legal control of a parish under ecclesiastical law. |
| martian | 2 | noun | Of or relating to the planet Mars, or (science fiction) its imagined inhabitants. |
| earthen | 2 | verb | Made of earth or mud. |
| displaced person | 4 | noun | A refugee, especially of war or of forced migration. |
| first person | 3 | noun | (grammar) Forms of pronouns or verbs used for the speaker or writer of the sentence in which they occur. |
| second person | 4 | noun | (grammar) The form of a verb used when the subject of a sentence is the audience. In English, the second person is used with the pronouns thou and you. In many languages the singular, applying to one person, and plural, applying to several people, are distinct. |
| third person | 3 | noun | (linguistics, with "the") The words, word-forms, and grammatical structures, taken collectively, that are normally used of people or things other than the speaker or the audience. |
| spontaneous abortion | 7 | noun | (medicine) A miscarriage. |
| businessperson | 4 | noun | A person in business, or one who works at a commercial institution. |
| therapeutic abortion | 7 | noun | (medicine) An abortion indicated by need for the health of the mother or due to the inviable nature of the fetus. |
| induced abortion | 5 | noun | A surgical or medicinal procedure that terminates a pregnancy by removing the fetus; a therapeutic abortion. It is a non-contraceptive form of birth control. |
| in person | 3 | in the flesh; without involving anyone else | |
| contagious abortion | 6 | noun | (zoology) A type of brucellosis in cattle caused by Brucella abortus. |
| habitual abortion | 7 | noun | (medicine) The third (or later) of a set of spontaneous abortions that occur simultaneously. |
| incomplete abortion | 6 | noun | (medicine) An abortion or miscarriage that does not fully remove all product traces of the fetus. |
| american standard version | 8 | The American Standard Version, officially Revised Version, Standard American Edition, is a Bible translation into English that was completed in 1901 with the publication of the revision of the Old Testament. | |
| authorized version | 5 | noun | (British) Synonym of King James Version. |
| carson | 2 | noun | A Scottish surname, possibly a form of Curzon. |
| king james version | 4 | noun | (biblical, Christianity) An English translation, published in 1611, of the Bible from the original Hebrew (Old Testament) and Greek (New Testament) commissioned for the Church of England, which is the version most quoted and influential in English literature and English Protestant religious culture. |
| persian | 2 | noun | Of, from, or pertaining to Persia. |
| person | 2 | noun | An individual who has been granted personhood; usually a human being. |
| revised standard version | 6 | noun | (biblical, Christianity) An English translation of the Bible published in 1952 by the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA, based on the earlier American Standard Version. |
| revised version | 4 | noun | (biblical) A late 19th-century British revision of the King James Version of the Bible. |
| tarzan | 2 | noun | (fiction) A heroic fictional character, raised from a baby to adulthood in the African jungle by apes. |
✍️ 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.
6 syllables
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