Top 82 Words That Rhyme with Weed (With Meanings)

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 weed!

Here you’ll find the top 82 words and phrases for rhyming the word ‘weed’.

Pretty cool huh?

Let’s get started…

Words That Rhyme With Weed

  • Accede – To agree to a request or demand.
  • Agreed – A past tense of agree; meaning having come to a mutual understanding or decision.
  • Aniseed – A plant with aromatic seeds used in cooking and medicine.
  • Anteed – Past tense of anteing, which refers to placing a bet or putting money in the pot in poker or other games.
  • Bead – A small, usually round object with a hole through the center, often used for decoration.
  • Bindweed – A type of creeping plant that twines around other plants or objects.
  • Bleed – To lose blood or allow blood to escape from a wound.
  • Breed – A type of animal or plant that has been developed by selective breeding.
  • Cede – To surrender or give up something, often territory or power.
  • Ceilidh – A social event with traditional Scottish or Irish music and dancing.
  • Centipede – A long, many-legged insect that can move quickly.
  • Chickenfeed – A small amount of money or something insignificant.
  • Concede – To admit that something is true or to surrender after a struggle.
  • Cottonseed – The seed of the cotton plant, often used to produce oil for cooking or as a food for livestock.
  • Crannied – Having narrow, deep openings or cracks.
  • Creed – A set of religious or political beliefs.
  • Decreed – A past tense of decree, meaning to officially order or declare something.
  • Deed – A legal document that transfers ownership of property or rights from one person to another.
  • Disagreed – Past tense of disagree, meaning to have a different opinion or to be in conflict with someone or something.
  • Emceed – To act as a master of ceremonies, introducing speakers or performers at an event.
  • Exceed – To go beyond a limit or expectation.
  • Feed – To give food to someone or something.
  • Filigreed – Decorated with delicate, ornamental patterns or designs.
  • Flambeed – Cooked or served with flames, often involving alcohol.
  • Freed – A past tense of free, meaning to release or liberate something or someone.
  • Fricasseed – A method of cooking meat in which it is first sautéed and then simmered in a liquid.
  • Garnisheed – To legally seize someone’s assets or wages as payment for a debt.
  • Glaceed – Coated with a glossy, sugary syrup.
  • Greed – Excessive or insatiable desire for wealth or possessions.
  • Guaranteed – to ensure or promise something
  • Hayseed – a seed of grass that is scattered in a hayfield
  • Heed – to give attention or pay close attention to
  • Hied – to go quickly or hurry
  • Impede – to delay or obstruct the progress of something or someone
  • Indeed – in truth or in fact; truly
  • Intercede – to intervene or mediate between two parties to resolve a conflict
  • Jimsonweed – a poisonous plant also known as Datura
  • Keyed – to mark with a symbol or code
  • Knead – to work and press with the hands, like in making dough
  • Kneed – past tense of kneel
  • Limeade – a sweetened drink made with lime juice and water
  • Locoweed – a plant that is poisonous to livestock
  • Mead – an alcoholic beverage made from fermented honey and water
  • Meed – a deserved share or reward
  • Millepede – a type of arthropod with many legs
  • Millipede – another term for millepede
  • Misdeed – an immoral or illegal act
  • Mislead – to cause someone to have a wrong idea or impression
  • Misread – to misunderstand or misinterpret something written or spoken
  • Monkeyed – to tamper with or play around with something
  • Need – to require or demand something
  • Orangeade – a sweetened drink made with orange juice and water
  • Overfeed – to give more food than is needed or healthy
  • Pedigreed – having a recorded ancestry or lineage
  • Peed – past tense of pee, meaning to urinate
  • Plead – to make an emotional appeal or beg for something
  • Precede – to come before in time or order
  • Proceed – to continue or carry on with something
  • Pureed – to blend or grind food into a smooth, creamy consistency
  • Recede – To go back or withdraw from a previously held position or belief.
  • Reed – A tall, slender-leaved plant that grows in water or wet ground.
  • Refereed – Judged or overseen by an impartial person, often in sports or academia.
  • Reread – To read something again, often in order to understand it better.
  • Reseed – To plant again or to plant more seeds in an area.
  • Screed – A long, often monotonous piece of writing or speech.
  • Secede – To withdraw formally from a membership, organization or alliance.
  • Seed – The part of a plant that contains the embryo and is capable of developing into a new plant.
  • Shinnied – Climbed or scrambled up a rope or pole.
  • Skied – To move or glide on skis over snow or water.
  • Speed – The rate at which something moves or operates or the rate of progress or development.
  • Stampede – A sudden panicked rush of a group of animals or people.
  • Steed – A horse that is used or ridden by someone.
  • Succeed – To achieve success in a particular endeavor or to follow another in a sequence or hierarchy.
  • Supersede – To replace or supplant something or someone that has become outdated or ineffective.
  • Swede – A person from Sweden or a type of root vegetable.
  • Teed – To place a golf ball on a tee in order to begin a round.
  • Togaed – Wearing a toga, a loose garment worn in ancient Rome.
  • Treed – To chase or corner an animal in a tree or to climb a tree for refuge or a better vantage point.
  • Tweed – A rough, woolen fabric often used for suits or jackets.
  • Underfeed – To not provide enough food or nourishment to someone or something.
  • Velocipede – A historic term for a bicycle or other human-powered vehicle.
  • Whinnied – The sound made by a horse or other equine animal.



Written by Gabriel Cruz - Foodie, Animal Lover, Slang & Language Enthusiast