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 Jane!
Here you’ll find the top 101 words and phrases for rhyming the word ‘Jane’.
Pretty cool huh?
Let’s get started…
Words That Rhyme With Jane
- Abstain – To choose to not do something, often for moral or religious reasons.
- Aeroplane – A powered flying vehicle with fixed wings and a weight greater than that of the air it displaces.
- Appertain – To relate to or be connected with something, often in a legal or formal context.
- Arcane – Mysterious and known only to a select few. Often associated with ancient knowledge or magic. Arcane subjects can be difficult to understand and may require significant study or expertise to fully comprehend. Examples of arcane subjects include alchemy, cryptography, and arcane magic.
- Arraign – To bring someone before a court of law to face charges.
- Ascertain – To find out or determine something with certainty.
- Attain – To achieve or reach a goal or objective.
- Bane – A cause of great distress or annoyance.
- Brain – The organ inside the skull that is responsible for thought, movement, sensation, and other bodily functions.
- Butane – A flammable hydrocarbon gas that is used as fuel for things like lighters and stoves.
- Campaign – An organized effort to achieve a specific goal, often in politics or advertising.
- Cane – A long, slender stick used for walking or as a support.
- Cellophane – A thin, transparent material that is used for wrapping things like food or gifts.
- Certain – Having no doubt or uncertainty; sure.
- Chain – A series of connected links or rings, often used to restrain or confine.
- Champagne – A type of sparkling wine that is typically associated with celebrations.
- Chicane – Deception or trickery, often in a legal or political context.
- Cocaine – A highly addictive stimulant drug that is illegal in many countries.
- Complain – To express dissatisfaction or annoyance about something.
- Constrain – To limit or restrict something, often in a physical or legal sense.
- Contain – To hold or have within; to keep something under control.
- Coxswain – The person who steers a boat and directs the rowers.
- Crane – A large, tall machine used for lifting and moving heavy objects.
- Deign – To do something that one considers to be beneath one’s dignity or status.
- Demimondaine – A woman who is considered to be of questionable morals or social status.
- Detain – To keep someone in custody or under restraint, often by legal authority.
- Disdain – a feeling of contempt or scorn towards something or someone
- Domain – an area of knowledge or expertise; a territory or field of control or ownership
- Drain – a pipe or channel that removes water or waste; the act of removing or emptying something
- Entertain – to provide amusement or enjoyment; to host or perform for an audience
- Explain – to make something clear or understandable; to provide a reason or justification
- Fain – with pleasure or willingness; eagerly or gladly
- Feign – to pretend or fake something; to give a false impression
- Foreordain – to determine or predestine something in advance; to predict or foresee
- Gain – to acquire or obtain something; to increase in value or amount
- Germane – relevant or closely connected to the matter at hand; applicable or appropriate
- Grain – a small, hard seed or particle; a texture or pattern in wood or fabric
- Halothane – a colorless, nonflammable liquid used as an anesthetic in medicine
- Humaine – a variant spelling of the word “human,” meaning characteristic of or relating to human beings
- Humane – characterized by compassion and kindness towards other living beings; treating others with dignity and respect
- Hurricane – a powerful storm with strong winds and heavy rain; a disaster or calamity
- Hydroplane – a boat or vehicle designed to skim across water; a condition in which a vehicle loses contact with the ground due to water
- Inane – silly, foolish, or meaningless; lacking sense or substance
- Ingrain – to deeply embed or establish something; to dye or color deeply into a material
- Inhumane – lacking compassion or mercy; cruel or brutal towards other living beings
- Insane – mentally unstable or ill; irrational or unreasonable
- Lain – past participle of the verb “lie,” meaning to recline or rest in a horizontal position
- Lane – a narrow road or pathway; a designated strip of a larger roadway
- Legerdemain – skillful or deceptive manipulation; magic or sleight of hand
- Main – The primary or most important aspect of something.
- Maintain – To keep something in a particular state or condition, often through consistent effort or attention.
- Mane – The long hair that grows from the neck of certain animals, such as horses or lions.
- Monoplane – A type of airplane with a single set of wings.
- Moraine – A ridge of sediment deposited by a glacier.
- Mundane – Ordinary or commonplace; lacking in excitement or interest.
- Murrain – An old term for a disease or plague that affects livestock.
- Obtain – To acquire or get possession of something.
- Ordain – To officially appoint or establish someone in a particular role or position.
- Overlain – To cover or place something on top of another object or surface.
- Pain – Physical discomfort or suffering.
- Pane – A single sheet of glass or other transparent material used in a window or door.
- Pertain – To be relevant or related to a particular subject or topic.
- Plain – Simple or unadorned; lacking in decoration or embellishment.
- Plane – A flat surface or level area; also, a type of tool used for shaping or smoothing wood.
- Polyurethane – A type of synthetic material often used in furniture or other consumer goods.
- Preordain – To determine or decide something in advance, often in a religious or spiritual context.
- Profane – Irreverent or disrespectful, often in a religious context.
- Rain – Moisture that falls from the sky in the form of water droplets.
- Reattain – To regain or achieve something again, often after a period of loss or absence.
- Reexplain – To explain something again, often in more detail or with greater clarity.
- Refrain – To abstain or hold back from doing something; also, a repeated phrase or melody in a song or poem.
- Regain – To recover or recapture something that was lost or taken away.
- Reign – The period of time during which a monarch or ruler is in power.
- Rein – A strap or piece of material used to control or guide a horse or other animal.
- Remain – to continue to exist or be left over after other parts have been taken away
- Restrain – to hold back or keep under control
- Retain – to keep possession of or remember something
- Retrain – to learn a new skill or behavior to replace an old one
- Romaine – a type of lettuce with long leaves and a slightly bitter taste
- Sane – mentally stable or rational
- Skein – a length of yarn or thread loosely coiled and knotted
- Slain – past tense of “slay,” which means to kill violently or brutally
- Sprain – an injury to a joint caused by twisting or stretching
- Stain – a mark or discoloration caused by a substance or liquid
- Strain – to exert force or pressure on something or someone
- Sugarcane – a tall, tropical grass used to produce sugar
- Sustain – to support or keep something going over time
- Swain – an old-fashioned term for a young man or country youth
- Terrain – the physical features of a piece of land
- Thane – a title used in medieval Scotland for a nobleman who was the chief of a clan or district
- Train – a group of connected vehicles or cars that move along tracks
- Twain – archaic term meaning “two” or “a pair”
- Urbane – sophisticated, polished, or suave in manner
- Urethane – a synthetic resin used in the manufacture of plastics and other materials
- Vain – having an excessively high opinion of oneself; also meaning futile or useless
- Vane – a flat or curved plate that rotates and shows the direction of the wind
- Vein – a blood vessel that carries blood toward the heart; also meaning a streak or seam of mineral in rock
- Wain – an old-fashioned term for a large, four-wheeled wagon
- Wane – to decrease gradually in size, amount, or intensity
- Wholegrain – made from or containing the whole kernel of a grain
- Windowpane – a piece of glass used in a window
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