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Rhymes for "aunt" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(n)
(countable) An argot, the jargon of a particular class or subgroup.
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(adj)
Casually calm and relaxed.
A short excursion for pleasure or refreshment; a ramble; a short journey.
(v)
(transitive) To parade, display with ostentation.
Not full, large, or plentiful; scarcely sufficient; scanty; meager.
A person in whom one can confide or share one's secrets: a friend.
(transitive) To wish for or desire (something); to feel a need or desire for; to crave, hanker, or demand.
(transitive) To take the place of; to replace, to supersede.
(transitive) To speak boastfully about.
A female confidant.
(transitive) To pour from one vessel into another.
To speak or shout at length in uncontrollable anger.
To sing, especially without instruments, and as applied to monophonic and pre-modern music.
To attract and delight, to charm.
Alternative form of détente. [(chiefly politics) A relaxing of tension, especially between countries.]
(transitive) To insert (something) surgically into the body.
(ambitransitive) To withdraw or repudiate a statement or opinion formerly expressed, especially formally and publicly.
A young woman who makes her first formal appearance in society.
The side of a store (or other shop) which faces the street and usually contains display windows.
To recite an incantation.
Any of several large ants, of the genus Camponotus, found in North America and northern China, that build nests in dead wood.
a plant consisting of buildings with facilities for manufacturing
(usually in forms of address) A Jewish aunt.
mount; mountain.
Immanuel Kant, a German philosopher.
A station built for the production of electric power; a power station.
(botany) One of the Tracheophyta, any plant possessing vascular tissue (xylem and phloem), including ferns, conifers, and flowering plants.
A plant that grows in water; a hydrophyte
to pose until nearly frozen in all sorts of uncomfortable positions.
A tropical vining plant of the species Epipremnum aureum, native to northern Australia and much of southern and eastern Asia.
(botany) A plant which reproduces by breading seeds in the wide sense of the term, including spores etc.
A factory where machines, especially cars, are made from their components.
(Christianity) A large basin used for baptism in or near a church.
A meatpacking facility.
a semi-aquatic plant that grows in soft wet land; most are monocots: sedge, sphagnum, grasses, cattails, etc; possibly heath
(archaic) The dodo (†Raphus cucullatus).
Archaic spelling of grant. [The act of granting or giving]
(transitive, medicine) To transfer (tissue or an organ) from one body to another, or from one part of a body to another.
An administrative region in the north of Italy.
A flaky roll or pastry in a form of a crescent.
To plant again, especially to plant in a different place, using different plants, or in a different design.
Any of several red or yellow ants that can inflict a harsh sting.
Synonym of epiphyte.
A plant that moves in response to touch and other physical stimuli; especially Mimosa pudica, an annual plant native to Central and South America.
Ficus elastica, a tropical tree used as a houseplant, native to Asia.
(dated or informal) A termite.
An agave (Agave americana) originally from Mexico but cultivated worldwide.
especially of species Chlorophytum comosum of green and white variegated evergreen perennial plants, grown as houseplants.
A plant designed for flowerbeds.
Any plant that can survive periods of extreme dehydration, including those of two species principally called resurrection plant:
Pseudopodospermum hispanicum (syn. Scorzonera hispanica, black salsify, black oyster plant), cultivated for its dark-skinned edible root
A tropical nomadic ant, principally in the subfamilies Dorylinae and Leptanillinae, that preys on other insects.
Any of several plants, the leaves of which become oriented to the morning sun:
Synonym of gasworks.
Zakynthos (an island of Greece).
a surgical procedure in which part or all of a damaged or diseased cornea is replaced by healthy corneal tissue from a donor
Any plant of the genus Hoya, especially those which are commonly cultivated as houseplants.
erect bushy mallow plant or small tree bearing bolls containing seeds with many long hairy fibers
A small yellow-brown ant, Monomorium pharaonis, introduced to virtually every area of the world, considered to be a major indoor pest.
lithophyte
Sarcodes sanguinea, a parasitic flowering plant in the heath family.
Codariocalyx motorius, a tropical Asian shrub, one of the few plants capable of rapid movement.
Pilea microphylla, a shrub or brush native to the tropical and subtropical Americas.
any of the large fierce australian ants of the genus myrmecia
Obsolete spelling of chant. [Type of singing done generally without instruments and harmony.]
(N)
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An army ant of the genus Dorylus.
(botany) Any plant that produces flowers and fruit; an angiosperm.
deciduous subshrub of southeastern asia having pinnate leaves and clusters of red or purple flowers; a source of indigo dye
javanese foliage plant grown for their handsome velvety leaves with violet-purple hairs
Any of the mound-building ants of the Formica rufa subgeneric group.
any of various western american plants of the genus grindelia having resinous leaves and stems formerly used medicinally; often poisonous to livestock
(beekeeping) Any plant from which bees usually collect nectar, pollen, or both for making honey.
Alternative form of pieplant. [(dated) A rhubarb of species Rheum rhaponticum, garden rhubarb.]
the font that is displayed on a computer screen
A shrub of species Graptophyllum pictum, native to New Guinea and widely used as an ornamental
old world perennial cultivated for its ornamental inflated papery orange-red calyx
An ant species, Monomorium minimum, native to North America characterized by their small size and for being black and scavengers.
A tritoma; a red-hot poker plant.
a plant having foliage that is shed annually at the end of the growing season
sensitive plant (Mimosa pudica).
A plant in the daisy family, Asteraceae, with long, powdery-white leaves (Helichrysum thianschanicum).