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Rhymes for "house" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(v)
(transitive) To wake (someone) from sleep, or from apathy.
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(intransitive, originally military slang, informal) To complain or grumble.
(transitive, figurative, modern usage) To accept, support, or take on as one’s own (an idea or a cause).
(n)
A person in a marriage or marital relationship.
(fashion) A shirt for women or girls, particularly a shirt with buttons and often a collar; a dress shirt tailored for women.
A small parasitic wingless insect of the order Psocodea.
(figurative) Any source of power, energy or strength; a source of influence or inspiration
A tower or other structure exhibiting a light or lights to warn or guide sailors.
An apartment or suite found on an upper floor, or floors, of a tall building, especially one that is expensive or luxurious with panoramic views.
A private house offering accommodation to paying guests; a boarding house; a bed and breakfast.
Any of several species of small, mostly European rodents of the family Gliridae.
(intransitive) To use the dipping or divining rod, as in search of water, ore, etc.
A place where animals are slaughtered.
A heated greenhouse.
Any small house or structure or enclosure used to house a dog.
A building for keeping goods of any kind, especially provisions.
Any building used by a club for meetings or social activities.
(obsolete) to drink, especially alcoholic drink
A Carthusian monastery.
A place for storing large amounts of products. In logistics, a place where products go to from the manufacturer before going to the retailer.
An establishment where coffee is served to clients; a café.
(vulgar) Brothel.
A business, such as an inn or tavern, where ale is sold.
A building containing a prison.
A restaurant that specializes in good cuts of meat, particularly steak.
(Australia slang) An outhouse; an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
A secure location, known to only a few trusted people, suitable for hiding witnesses, agents or other persons perceived as being in danger.
(Canada, US) An outbuilding, typically permanent, containing a toilet or seat over a cesspit.
(figuratively, by extension) A chaotic, uproarious, noisy place.
A sturdy military fortification, often of concrete, with gunports.
(rail transport) A circular building in which locomotives are housed, sometimes with a turntable.
Alternative spelling of state house. [A state legislature (of one of the fifty United States), or government generally.]
Synonym of hencoop.
(chiefly US, Canada, Australia, Philippines) A row house or terraced house.
A New World mouse of the genus Reithrodontomys.
Alternative spelling of boarding house. [A private house in which paying residents are provided with accommodation and meals.]
Any insect of the order Psocoptera, that live on or near trees and feed on algae and lichen.
A facility where harvested food is processed into a salable condition.
Any rodent of the genus Calomys.
A venue for performing plays.
A house (usually the main house) on a farm; thus:
A charitable institution where poor or homeless people are lodged.
A public building housing courts of law.
A building housing a school, especially a small or single-room one.
A building at the edge of a river, lake or other body of water in which boats are kept.
Alternative form of clearing house. [A central point where clearing banks and other financial firms exchange checks, settle accounts, etc.]
Alternative form of doll's house. [(UK) A miniature house used by children as a toy for recreating domestic settings.]
(Canada, US) A small vole such as the meadow vole.
A parasitic insect, Pthirus pubis, that lives amongst the pubic hairs of humans and feeds on blood.
Any of the muroid rodents in the genus Peromyscus, especially Peromyscus maniculatus.
(US, firefighting) A fire station
The universally common mouse of the species Mus musculus.
A marine polychaete worm (genus Aphrodita) with the body covered in a dense mat of setae.
Any species of the taxonomic family Zapodidae of rodents, variously endemic to North America or China.
An aphid.
A mouse of the subfamily Perognathinae
A large, black bird with a lyre-shaped tail, Lyrurus tetrix (syn. Tetrao tetrix).
A parasitic insect, Pediculus humanus humanus (syn. Pediculus humanus corporis), that infests the body and clothes of humans and feeds on blood.
(N)
A bird louse is any chewing louse (small, biting insects) of order Phthiraptera which parasitizes warm-blooded animals, especially birds.
(US) A vole.
A medium-sized bird, Lagopus lagopus scotica, of the grouse family, found in heather moorland in Great Britain and Ireland.
(US) The white-footed mouse of America.
Any aquatic crustacean which is a parasite of fish, typically attached to the skin or gills
A parasitic insect, Pediculus humanus capitis, which lives among the hairs on the head of a human and feeds on blood.
A psyllid, any species of the family Psyllidae of plant-feeding insects.
Either of the two species in the genus Microdipodops, native to the deserts of the South-western United States.
Any louse of the suborder Anoplura.
wingless insect with mouth parts adapted for biting; mostly parasitic on birds
(computing) An input device like a mouse that can be lifted from a surface and moved in three dimensions.
(Australia) Any of several small carnivorous marsupials of the family Dasyuridae, especially in the genera Sminthopsis and Antechinus.
Alternative spelling of sandgrouse. [Any of several species of birds of the family Pteroclidae in the order Pterocliformes.]
Peromyscus gossypinus, an omnivorous rodent of the southeastern United States, often using cotton for nest construction.
Any of the genus Onychomys of rodents, found in North America.
crab louse, Pthirus pubis.
A louse of species Menopon pallidum
A long communal housing of the Iroquois and some other American Indians, the Malaysians, the Indonesians, the Vikings, and many other peoples.
A rodent of species Peromyscus eremicus, native to desert areas of western North America.
Alternative form of churchmouse. [A mouse living in a church; used in similes to suggest a very poor person.]
destructive to various grape plants
short-tailed glossy-furred burrowing vole of the eastern united states
minute wingless psocopterous insects injurious to books and papers
(zoology) A jumping mouse found in moist habitats throughout much of Canada and the northeastern United States, Zapus hudsonius.
brown mottled north american grouse of western prairies
parasitic on poultry
any of several small grayish new world mice inhabiting e.g. grain fields
the town or city that is the seat of government for a county
a variety of dormouse
a black grouse of western asia
head or body louse
large northern european black grouse with a lyre-shaped tail
nocturnal yellowish-brown mouse inhabiting woods and fields and gardens
(obsolete) A covering, usually of textile (or mail) and attached to a saddle; a saddlecloth.