Common multi-word phrases that nearly rhyme with follow on:
6 letters:
ago in,
ago as
7 letters:
aso san,
onto an,
also an
8 letters: solo man,
allow an,
ago when,
not open,
plato in,
all open,
below an,
otto von,
allow in,
piano in
9 letters:
be stolen,
hollow in,
wallow in,
drop open,
from open,
hoppo men,
allows an,
fall open,
most open,
top onion,
almost an,
only open
10 letters:
follows an,
barrow man,
swallow up,
allowed an,
follows in,
small open,
follows as,
follows up,
from roman,
large open,
not opened,
stop codon,
almost ten,
chicago in,
colonel in
11 letters:
followed an,
homme moyen,
followed in,
followed as,
followed up,
followed us,
from moment,
giant ocean,
large ocean,
stop motion,
loch lomond,
piano tuned,
plato alone,
plato often,
robert owen,
roger bowen,
model ocean,
naval ocean,
piano alone
12 letters:
block motion,
cause motion,
lodge opened,
scotch roman,
scott opened,
shock motion,
stock opened,
swallowed up,
tossed ocean,
harvey logan,
following an,
father hogan,
salon opened,
bowel motion,
hollow organ,
johnny logan,
molly opened
13 letters:
followed when,
shallow ocean,
square opened,
charles bowen,
i'homme moyen,
compare groen,
madame roguin,
passage opens,
squacco heron,
colonel hayne,
hollow wooden,
chicago alone,
chicago urban
14 letters:
bizarre notion,
bizarre moment,
chicago opened,
father hoecken,
passage opened,
followed often
15 letters:
bizarre notions
16 letters:
bourgeois notion
17 letters:
bourgeois notions
What's up with this "phrase rhymes" section?
This experimental new tab on RhymeZone shows you
phrases that might be good matches for your multi-syllable query word. For example, the word
poetry produces phrase rhymes like boba tea and swollen knee and
hopeful he and moments we. Some of these (like "boba tea") are
single conceptual units, while others (like "hopeful he") are sentence
fragments. Both kinds of results may be useful when writing slant
rhymes that cross line boundaries, which are popular in hip hop lyrics and
musical theater. Typically, RhymeZone's phrase rhymes are assonant (share
vowel sounds) with the query word, with some degree of consonant match as well.
You'll often find lots of options in this tab, including many junky ones
that don't work well. Stay tuned while we find the right formula!
Commonly used words are shown in bold. Rare words are dimmed. Click on a word above to view its definition.