Top 99 Words That Rhyme with Domain (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 domain!

Here you’ll find the top 99 words and phrases for rhyming the word ‘Domain’.

Pretty cool huh?

Let’s get started…

Words That Rhyme With Domain

  • Abstain – To refrain or avoid from doing something, especially something considered as unhealthy or undesirable.
  • Aeroplane – A powered flying vehicle that uses fixed wings and a jet or propeller engine to stay in the air.
  • Appertain – To relate or belong to something as a part or attribute.
  • Arcane – Referring to knowledge or practices that are mysterious or obscure, often associated with magic or secret societies.
  • Arraign – To bring someone before a court of law to answer criminal charges.
  • Ascertain – To find out for certain, to determine or verify.
  • Attain – To achieve, gain, or obtain something through effort or skill.
  • Bane – Something that causes harm or death, a curse or source of misery.
  • Brain – The organ inside the skull responsible for cognitive processes and controlling the body’s functions.
  • Campaign – A planned series of activities or actions aimed at achieving a specific goal, especially in politics or marketing.
  • Cane – A slender, flexible stick used for support while walking or as a weapon.
  • Cellophane – A thin, transparent material made of cellulose used for wrapping or packaging.
  • Certain – Sure, known without a doubt, or being convinced of something.
  • Chain – A series of connected metal links used for restraining or securing objects.
  • Champagne – A sparkling wine produced in the Champagne region of France.
  • Chicane – To use trickery or deception to gain an advantage, or a deceptive or tricky maneuver.
  • Cocaine – A powerful, addictive stimulant drug derived from the coca plant.
  • Complain – To express dissatisfaction or annoyance about something.
  • Constrain – To limit or restrict someone or something’s actions or freedom.
  • Contain – To hold or keep something within limits or boundaries, or to be able to control or prevent something from spreading.
  • Coxswain – The person in charge of steering a boat, especially in a race.
  • Crane – A large, tall bird with long legs and a long neck, or a machine used for lifting and moving heavy objects.
  • Deign – To condescend to do something, to do something considered beneath one’s dignity.
  • Demimondaine – A woman whose reputation is considered questionable or who associates with wealthy or influential men.
  • Detain – To keep someone in custody or to prevent them from leaving.
  • Disdain – A feeling of contempt or scorn towards someone or something regarded as inferior.
  • Drain – To remove or draw off liquid, or a pipe or channel used for carrying off excess liquid or waste.
  • Entertain – To provide amusement or enjoyment to someone, especially by performing or organizing activities or events.
  • Explain – To make something clear or understandable by describing or giving reasons for it.
  • Fain – Willing, eager, or pleased to do something.
  • Feign – To pretend or fake something, to simulate or fabricate.
  • Foreordain – To predestine or determine something in advance, often with religious connotations.
  • Remain – To continue to exist or be left over after others have gone.
  • Restrain – To prevent someone or something from doing something by holding them back or limiting their actions.
  • Retain – To keep something in one’s possession or to remember information or knowledge.
  • Retrain – To teach new skills or techniques to someone who has already been trained in a particular field.
  • Romaine – A variety of lettuce with a tall head and long leaves.
  • Sane – Having a sound mind or mental health.
  • Skein – A length of yarn or thread wound in a loose, long coil.
  • Slain – Past tense of “slay,” meaning to kill violently.
  • Sprain – An injury to a ligament caused by twisting or wrenching a joint.
  • Stain – A mark or discoloration caused by the application of a substance.
  • Strain – To exert oneself physically or mentally, or to put pressure on something until it becomes deformed or damaged.
  • Sugarcane – A tall perennial grass grown in tropical regions for the production of sugar.
  • Sustain – To support or maintain something at a certain level or rate.
  • Swain – A young man who is a country lover or farmer.
  • Tain – A thin layer or coating applied to a surface.
  • Terrain – A stretch of land or the physical features of an area.
  • Thane – A nobleman or landowner in medieval Scotland.
  • Train – To teach or prepare someone for a particular job or task.
  • Twain – Two items of the same kind or a pair of something.
  • Urbane – Sophisticated or refined in manners and style.
  • Urethane – A synthetic resin used as an adhesive or coating.
  • Vain – Having an excessively high opinion of oneself or one’s appearance.
  • Vane – A device that indicates wind direction, typically mounted on a rooftop.
  • Vein – A blood vessel that carries blood towards the heart, or a streak of a different color or texture in a material.
  • Wain – A large, open wagon used for transporting goods or people.
  • Wane – To decrease gradually in size, amount, or intensity.
  • Wholegrain – A food product made from grains that have not had their bran and germ removed.
  • Windowpane – A sheet of glass in a window or a small square of paper used for drugs.
  • Gain – To acquire or obtain something through effort or action.
  • Germane – Relevant or appropriate to the subject or matter at hand.
  • Grain – A small, hard seed or particle, or the texture or pattern of a surface.
  • Halothane – A colorless, nonflammable, liquid drug used as a general anesthetic.
  • Humaine – The feminine form of the French word for “human”, relating to or characteristic of humans.
  • Humane – Showing compassion or benevolence towards others, especially animals.
  • Hurricane – A tropical cyclone with strong winds and heavy rain.
  • Hydroplane – A fast motorboat designed to skim over the surface of water.
  • Inane – Silly or foolish, lacking sense or substance.
  • Ingrain – To firmly establish something as a habit, belief, or characteristic.
  • Inhumane – Cruel or lacking compassion towards humans or animals.
  • Insane – Mentally ill or deranged, or extremely foolish or irrational.
  • Lain – To be situated or placed in a horizontal position.
  • Lane – A narrow road or passage, often between buildings or fields.
  • Legerdemain – Skillful use of one’s hands to deceive or trick others, especially in magic tricks.
  • Main – Most important or significant, or the principal channel or route for transportation.
  • Maintain – To keep something in a particular state or condition, often through effort or attention.
  • Mane – The long, thick hair that grows from the neck of certain animals, especially horses and lions.
  • Monoplane – An airplane with a single pair of wings.
  • Moraine – A mass of rocks and sediment left by a glacier.
  • Mundane – Lacking interest or excitement, ordinary or commonplace.
  • Murrain – A highly infectious disease affecting cattle and other livestock.
  • Obtain – To get or acquire something through effort or action.
  • Ordain – To officially establish or decree something, often in a religious context.
  • Overlain – Past participle of “overlay”, meaning to cover or place something on top of another thing.
  • Pain – Physical or emotional discomfort or suffering.
  • Pane – A flat piece of glass or other transparent material used to cover a window or opening.
  • Pertain – To be relevant or related to something, or to belong or be connected to a particular group or category.
  • Plain – Simple or basic, without decoration or elaboration.
  • Plane – A flat or level surface, or a tool used for shaping or smoothing wood.
  • Preordain – To foreordain or determine something in advance, often in a religious context.
  • Profane – Irreverent or disrespectful towards something considered sacred or holy.
  • Rain – Water falling in drops from the atmosphere, often as part of the weather.
  • Reattain – To regain or achieve again, often after a loss or setback.
  • Reexplain – To explain something again or in more detail.
  • Refrain – To abstain or resist from doing something, or a repeated phrase or verse in a song or poem.
  • Regain – To recover or regain possession of something lost or taken away.
  • Reign – The period during which a monarch rules, or to hold sovereign power or authority.
  • Rein – A long, narrow strap attached to a horse’s bit, used to guide or control the animal

 

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