This post contains our favorite combination of "perfect rhymes" and "near rhymes". Near rhymes are words you may have to stretch or exaggerate for songwriting and poems.
Welcome to this guide on the best words that rhyme with quit!
Here you’ll find the top 31 words and phrases for rhyming the word ‘quit’.
Pretty cool huh?
Let’s get started…
Words That Rhyme With Quit
- Acquit – To declare someone not guilty of a crime or wrongdoing.
- Admit – To confess or acknowledge something, usually a mistake or fault.
- Bit – A small piece or amount of something.
- Commit – To pledge or devote oneself to a certain action or cause.
- Counterfeit – To produce a fake or imitation of something with the intent to deceive.
- Emit – To release or give off something, usually gas or radiation.
- Fit – To be the right size or shape for something; also, to be healthy and in good physical condition.
- Git – A contemptible or unpleasant person, usually used as an insult.
- Grit – Courage and determination in the face of adversity or difficulty.
- Hit – To strike or come into contact with something forcefully.
- Hypocrite – A person who pretends to have virtues or beliefs they do not actually possess.
- It – Used as a pronoun to refer to a thing or an animal that has already been mentioned or is easily identifiable.
- Kit – A set of tools or equipment used for a particular purpose.
- Knit – To create fabric by interlocking loops of yarn with needles.
- Lit – Past tense of “light,” meaning to illuminate or ignite something.
- Omit – To leave out or exclude something, usually intentionally.
- Permit – To allow or authorize something.
- Pit – A large hole in the ground, often used for mining or as a receptacle for waste.
- Remit – To send money or payment for something; also, to cancel or reduce a debt or penalty.
- Shit – Vulgar slang for feces; also, an expression of frustration or disappointment.
- Sit – To rest one’s weight on one’s buttocks and be supported by a surface.
- Slit – A narrow cut or opening in something.
- Spit – To expel saliva or other substances from one’s mouth; also, a long, thin rod used for cooking meat over an open flame.
- Split – To divide or separate something into two or more parts.
- Submit – To yield or surrender to authority or control.
- Tit – A small, usually songbird with a pointed bill and rounded wings.
- Transmit – To send or communicate information or signals, usually electronically.
- Unfit – Not suitable or qualified for a particular task or position.
- Whit – A tiny amount or quantity of something.
- Wit – The ability to think and understand things quickly and cleverly.
- Writ – A legal order or document, usually issued by a court.






