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Rhymes for "racket" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(n)
A fixture attached to a wall to hold up a shelf.
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A piece of clothing worn on the upper body outside a shirt or blouse, often waist length to thigh length.
(networking) A small fragment of data as transmitted on some types of network, notably Ethernet networks (Wikipedia).
(computing) Either of the inequality signs < and >, when used as brackets in programming languages and markup languages.
(v)
To play a game that involves using a racquet.
A slit or other opening in an item of clothing, to allow access to pockets or fastenings
(chiefly US) A predatory wasp with alternating black and yellow stripes around the abdomen, usually of the genera Vespula or Dolichovespula.
A short leather jacket, with an elasticated waist and cuffs, a fleece collar and a zip front.
A tailored jacket that is not part of a suit; especially one of a sturdy fabric originally designed for outdoor sports.
(music) An old wind instrument of the double bassoon kind, having ventages but not keys.
A jacket, usually khaki-coloured with many large pockets, worn by birdwatchers and the like.
A barrel-shaped bottle; a flagon.
(intransitive, slang, vulgar, derogatory) To masturbate.
an article of protective clothing that is designed to keep the wearer's head floating above the surface of the water.
(British) The formal suit, typically black, that includes this type of jacket.
(printing, publishing) The detachable paper cover of a book; used to protect the binding, and to provide a blurb.
A short woollen overcoat, originally as worn by sailors; a pea coat.
A range over which a piecewise linear, generally progressive, tax is linear.
A men's jacket designed to be worn while smoking tobacco, typically made of soft fabric with a tie belt.
An enclosed space, or the walls used to create it, that surrounds an object to be heated or cooled by water flowing around it.
(British) A type of thick jacket, usually dark blue, often worn by men who work outside (though originally worn by donkeymen)
A double-breasted jacket, part of mess kit.
A semiformal lightweight jacket, usually made of nylon, with striped cuffs and neck, similar to an MA-1 flight jacket.
The jacket of a shell suit.
(by extension, idiomatic) The amount a person earns from employment.
a group people having approximately the same age
A lifejacket.
Alternative form of bedjacket. [A short jacket worn when sitting up in bed, usually by women.]
A small, broad-headed nail or tack.
An old-fashioned life jacket having thin pieces of cork enclosed within canvas.
(historical) A usually curved pipe projecting from the wall of a room, used for illumination by gas.
A range of income, used for demographic data, as well as to calculate taxes and benefits.
a category of merchandise based on their price
(UK, archaic) Alternative form of snecket. [(UK, dialect) a door latch]
a light long-handled racket used by badminton players
a hussar's jacket worn over the shoulders
a man's soft jacket usually with a tie belt; worn at home
a bracket to support a shelf
a parka to be worn while skiing
a small racket with a long handle used for playing squash
(obsolete, Scotland, military) A stockade.
a category of taxpayers based on the amount of their income
(idiomatic) To cope; to be successful in something despite adversity.
An unincorporated community in the town of Washington, Eau Claire County, Wisconsin, United States.
(slang, chiefly UK) To fall over; to topple.
A surname from French.
A suburb of Sydney in the City of Blacktown, New South Wales, Australia.
a paper jacket for a book; a jacket on which promotional information is printed
(slang) A mess jacket.
A surname.
A surname originating as a patronymic.
A loose, belted, single-breasted jacket with box pleats on the back and front.
The language of these people.