Top 46 Words That Rhyme with Produce (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 produce!

Here you’ll find the top 46 words and phrases for rhyming the word ‘produce’ 

Pretty cool huh?

Let’s get started…

Words That Rhyme With Produce

  • Abstruse – difficult to understand or comprehend.
  • Abuse – the act of mistreating someone or something, typically causing harm or damage.
  • Adduce – to bring forward as evidence or argument.
  • Burnoose – a long, hooded cloak traditionally worn by Arab men.
  • Caboose – a car on a freight train for the use of the train crew, typically containing cooking and sleeping facilities.
  • Calaboose – a small jail or prison, typically located in a rural area.
  • Catafalques – a raised structure on which a coffin rests during a funeral.
  • Conduce – to contribute to or promote a particular result.
  • Coos – soft murmuring sounds made by doves or pigeons.
  • Deduce – to draw a conclusion from something known or assumed.
  • Deuce – a playing card with a value of two, or a tie score in tennis or other games.
  • Diffuse – to spread or scatter widely, or to make something less concentrated or intense.
  • Disabuse – to free someone from a mistaken or misguided belief or idea.
  • Disuse – the state of no longer being used or practiced.
  • Educe – to draw or bring out, or to infer from known facts.
  • Effuse – to pour out or emit, or to speak or write at great length.
  • Excuse – a reason or explanation given to justify or defend a fault or offense.
  • Goose – a large waterbird with a long neck and webbed feet, or to poke or prod someone playfully.
  • Induce – to bring about or cause something, or to persuade or influence someone to do something.
  • Introduce – to present someone or something to others for the first time, or to bring a new idea or practice into use.
  • Juice – the liquid extracted from fruits or vegetables, or energy or power.
  • Loose – not firmly or tightly fixed in place, or to release or untie something.
  • Moose – a large deer with broad, palmate antlers, or a type of meat.
  • Mousse – a light, whipped dessert or hair styling product.
  • Noose – a loop made in a rope or cord that tightens when pulled, used for trapping or execution.
  • Nous – a French word meaning “intellect” or “common sense.”
  • Obtuse – an adjective used to describe something that is blunt, dull, or insensitive.
  • Outproduce – a verb meaning to produce more than something or someone else.
  • Overproduce – a verb meaning to produce more than is needed or desired.
  • Papoose – a Native American word for a baby or small child, often used to describe a type of carrier used to carry babies.
  • Profuse – an adjective meaning abundant, excessive, or overflowing.
  • Puce – a reddish-brown color often used to describe a type of fabric or paint.
  • Recluse – a noun describing a person who lives in isolation or seclusion from society.
  • Reduce – a verb meaning to make something smaller, less, or lower in quantity or value.
  • Reintroduce – a verb meaning to bring back or reintroduce something that was previously introduced or used.
  • Reproduce – a verb meaning to create a new copy or version of something.
  • Reuse – a verb meaning to use something again instead of throwing it away or getting a new one.
  • Schuss – a skiing term used to describe a straight, fast downhill run.
  • Seduce – a verb meaning to entice or lure someone into doing something, often with the promise of pleasure or reward.
  • Sluice – a noun or verb describing a channel or gate used to control the flow of water, often used in mining or irrigation.
  • Spruce – a type of evergreen tree or a verb meaning to make something neat or tidy.
  • Toques – a type of winter hat, often worn in Canada or other cold climates.
  • Truce – a noun describing an agreement to stop fighting or arguing for a certain period of time.
  • Unloose – a verb meaning to release or let go of something.
  • Use – a verb meaning to utilize or put something to practical or beneficial use.
  • Vamoose – a verb meaning to leave quickly or suddenly, often used informally.

 



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