Words that rhyme with culture
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agriculture
n 1: a large-scale farming enterprise [syn: agribusiness, agriculture, factory farm] 2: the practice of cultivating the land or raising stock [syn: farming, agriculture, husbandry] 3: the federal department that administers programs that provide services to farmers (including research and soil conservation and efforts to stabilize the farming economy); created in 1862 [syn: Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Department, Agriculture, USDA] 4: the class of people engaged in growing food -
apiculture
n 1: the cultivation of bees on a commercial scale for the production of honey [syn: beekeeping, apiculture] -
aquaculture
n 1: rearing aquatic animals or cultivating aquatic plants for food -
aquiculture
n 1: a technique of growing plants (without soil) in water containing dissolved nutrients [syn: hydroponics, aquiculture, tank farming] -
arboriculture
n 1: the cultivation of tree for the production of timber [syn: arboriculture, tree farming] -
are
n 1: a unit of surface area equal to 100 square meters [syn: are, ar] -
counterculture
n 1: a culture with lifestyles and values opposed to those of the established culture -
floriculture
n 1: the cultivation of flowering plants [syn: flower gardening, floriculture] -
future
adj 1: yet to be or coming; "some future historian will evaluate him" [ant: past, present(a)] 2: effective in or looking toward the future; "he was preparing for future employment opportunities" 3: (of elected officers) elected but not yet serving; "our next president" [syn: future(a), next, succeeding(a)] 4: a verb tense or other formation referring to events or states that have not yet happened; "future auxiliary" n 1: the time yet to come [syn: future, hereafter, futurity, time to come] [ant: past, past times, yesteryear] 2: a verb tense that expresses actions or states in the future [syn: future, future tense] 3: bulk commodities bought or sold at an agreed price for delivery at a specified future date -
horticulture
n 1: the cultivation of plants [syn: gardening, horticulture] -
mixture
n 1: (chemistry) a substance consisting of two or more substances mixed together (not in fixed proportions and not with chemical bonding) 2: any foodstuff made by combining different ingredients; "he volunteered to taste her latest concoction"; "he drank a mixture of beer and lemonade" [syn: concoction, mixture, intermixture] 3: a collection containing a variety of sorts of things; "a great assortment of cars was on display"; "he had a variety of disorders"; "a veritable smorgasbord of religions" [syn: assortment, mixture, mixed bag, miscellany, miscellanea, variety, salmagundi, smorgasbord, potpourri, motley] 4: an event that combines things in a mixture; "a gradual mixture of cultures" [syn: mix, mixture] 5: the act of mixing together; "paste made by a mix of flour and water"; "the mixing of sound channels in the recording studio" [syn: mix, commixture, admixture, mixture, intermixture, mixing] -
monoculture
n 1: the cultivation of a single crop (on a farm or area or country) -
rapture
n 1: a state of being carried away by overwhelming emotion; "listening to sweet music in a perfect rapture"- Charles Dickens [syn: ecstasy, rapture, transport, exaltation, raptus] 2: a state of elated bliss [syn: ecstasy, rapture] -
sculpture
n 1: a three-dimensional work of plastic art 2: creating figures or designs in three dimensions [syn: sculpture, carving] v 1: create by shaping stone or wood or any other hard material; "sculpt a swan out of a block of ice" [syn: sculpt, sculpture] 2: shape (a material like stone or wood) by whittling away at it; "She is sculpting the block of marble into an image of her husband" [syn: sculpt, sculpture, grave] -
sericulture
n 1: raising silkworms in order to obtain raw silk 2: the production of raw silk by raising silkworms -
squelcher
n 1: a crushing remark [syn: put-down, squelch, squelcher, takedown] 2: an electric circuit that cuts off a receiver when the signal becomes weaker than the noise [syn: squelch circuit, squelch, squelcher] -
structure
n 1: a thing constructed; a complex entity constructed of many parts; "the structure consisted of a series of arches"; "she wore her hair in an amazing construction of whirls and ribbons" [syn: structure, construction] 2: the manner of construction of something and the arrangement of its parts; "artists must study the structure of the human body"; "the structure of the benzene molecule" 3: the complex composition of knowledge as elements and their combinations; "his lectures have no structure" 4: a particular complex anatomical part of a living thing; "he has good bone structure" [syn: structure, anatomical structure, complex body part, bodily structure, body structure] 5: the people in a society considered as a system organized by a characteristic pattern of relationships; "the social organization of England and America is very different"; "sociologists have studied the changing structure of the family" [syn: social organization, social organisation, social structure, social system, structure] v 1: give a structure to; "I need to structure my days" -
subculture
n 1: a social group within a national culture that has distinctive patterns of behavior and beliefs -
torture
n 1: extreme mental distress [syn: anguish, torment, torture] 2: unbearable physical pain [syn: torture, torment] 3: intense feelings of suffering; acute mental or physical pain; "an agony of doubt"; "the torments of the damned" [syn: agony, torment, torture] 4: the act of distorting something so it seems to mean something it was not intended to mean [syn: distortion, overrefinement, straining, torture, twisting] 5: the deliberate, systematic, or wanton infliction of physical or mental suffering by one or more persons in an attempt to force another person to yield information or to make a confession or for any other reason; "it required unnatural torturing to extract a confession" [syn: torture, torturing] v 1: torment emotionally or mentally [syn: torment, torture, excruciate, rack] 2: subject to torture; "The sinners will be tormented in Hell, according to the Bible" [syn: torture, excruciate, torment] -
tortured
adj 1: experiencing intense pain especially mental pain; "an anguished conscience"; "a small tormented schoolboy"; "a tortured witness to another's humiliation" [syn: anguished, tormented, tortured] -
viniculture
n 1: the cultivation of grapes and grape vines; grape growing [syn: viticulture, viniculture] -
viticulture
n 1: the cultivation of grapes and grape vines; grape growing [syn: viticulture, viniculture] -
vulture
n 1: any of various large diurnal birds of prey having naked heads and weak claws and feeding chiefly on carrion 2: someone who attacks in search of booty [syn: marauder, predator, vulture, piranha] -
chirr
v 1: make a vibrant noise, of grasshoppers or cicadas -
churr
v 1: make a vibrant sound, as of some birds [syn: churr, whirr] -
silviculture
n 1: the branch of forestry dealing with the development and care of forests -
sepulture
n 1: the ritual placing of a corpse in a grave [syn: burial, entombment, inhumation, interment, sepulture] 2: a chamber that is used as a grave [syn: burial chamber, sepulcher, sepulchre, sepulture] -
aviculture
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multure
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chirre
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belcher
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sandculture
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unculture
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chemiculture
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citriculture
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pisciculture
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sylviculture
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urbiculture
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olericulture
See also culture definition and culture synonyms
