Words that rhyme with doing

  • arguing
    n 1: a contentious speech act; a dispute where there is strong disagreement; "they were involved in a violent argument" [syn: controversy, contention, contestation, disputation, disceptation, tilt, argument, arguing]
  • barbecuing
    n 1: roasting a large piece of meat on a revolving spit out of doors over an open fire
  • being
    n 1: the state or fact of existing; "a point of view gradually coming into being"; "laws in existence for centuries" [syn: being, beingness, existence] [ant: nonbeing, nonentity, nonexistence] 2: a living thing that has (or can develop) the ability to act or function independently [syn: organism, being]
  • blueing
    n 1: used to whiten laundry or hair or give it a bluish tinge [syn: bluing, blueing, blue] 2: a process that makes something blue (or bluish) [syn: bluing, blueing]
  • bluing
    n 1: used to whiten laundry or hair or give it a bluish tinge [syn: bluing, blueing, blue] 2: a process that makes something blue (or bluish) [syn: bluing, blueing]
  • brewing
    n 1: the production of malt beverages (as beer or ale) from malt and hops by grinding and boiling them and fermenting the result with yeast
  • cheering
    adj 1: providing freedom from worry [syn: comforting, cheering, satisfying] n 1: encouragement in the form of cheers from spectators; "it's all over but the shouting" [syn: cheering, shouting]
  • chewing
    n 1: biting and grinding food in your mouth so it becomes soft enough to swallow [syn: chew, chewing, mastication, manduction]
  • continuing
    adj 1: remaining in force or being carried on without letup; "the act provided a continuing annual appropriation"; "the continuing struggle to put food on the table" 2: of long duration; "chronic money problems" [syn: chronic, continuing]
  • drinking
    n 1: the act of consuming liquids [syn: drinking, imbibing, imbibition] 2: the act of drinking alcoholic beverages to excess; "drink was his downfall" [syn: drink, drinking, boozing, drunkenness, crapulence]
  • evildoing
    n 1: the act of transgressing; the violation of a law or a duty or moral principle; "the boy was punished for the transgressions of his father" [syn: transgression, evildoing]
  • going
    adj 1: in full operation; "a going concern" n 1: the act of departing [syn: departure, going, going away, leaving] 2: euphemistic expressions for death; "thousands mourned his passing" [syn: passing, loss, departure, exit, expiration, going, release] 3: advancing toward a goal; "persuading him was easy going"; "the proposal faces tough sledding" [syn: going, sledding]
  • hearing
    adj 1: able to perceive sound [ant: deaf] n 1: (law) a proceeding (usually by a court) where evidence is taken for the purpose of determining an issue of fact and reaching a decision based on that evidence 2: an opportunity to state your case and be heard; "they condemned him without a hearing"; "he saw that he had lost his audience" [syn: hearing, audience] 3: the range within which a voice can be heard; "the children were told to stay within earshot" [syn: earshot, earreach, hearing] 4: the act of hearing attentively; "you can learn a lot by just listening"; "they make good music--you should give them a hearing" [syn: listening, hearing] 5: a session (of a committee or grand jury) in which witnesses are called and testimony is taken; "the investigative committee will hold hearings in Chicago" 6: the ability to hear; the auditory faculty; "his hearing was impaired" [syn: hearing, audition, auditory sense, sense of hearing, auditory modality]
  • living
    adj 1: pertaining to living persons; "within living memory" 2: true to life; lifelike; "the living image of her mother" 3: (informal) absolute; "she is a living doll"; "scared the living daylights out of them"; "beat the living hell out of him" 4: still in existence; "the Wollemi pine found in Australia is a surviving specimen of a conifer thought to have been long extinct and therefore known as a living fossil"; "the only surviving frontier blockhouse in Pennsylvania" [syn: surviving, living] 5: still in active use; "a living language" 6: (used of minerals or stone) in its natural state and place; not mined or quarried; "carved into the living stone"; n 1: the experience of being alive; the course of human events and activities; "he could no longer cope with the complexities of life" [syn: life, living] 2: people who are still living; "save your pity for the living" [ant: dead] 3: the condition of living or the state of being alive; "while there's life there's hope"; "life depends on many chemical and physical processes" [syn: animation, life, living, aliveness] 4: the financial means whereby one lives; "each child was expected to pay for their keep"; "he applied to the state for support"; "he could no longer earn his own livelihood" [syn: support, keep, livelihood, living, bread and butter, sustenance]
  • moving
    adj 1: in motion; "a constantly moving crowd"; "the moving parts of the machine" [ant: nonmoving, unmoving] 2: arousing or capable of arousing deep emotion; "she laid her case of destitution before him in a very moving letter"- N. Hawthorne [ant: unmoving] 3: used of a series of photographs presented so as to create the illusion of motion; "Her ambition was to be in moving pictures or `the movies'" [ant: still]
  • pursuing
    adj 1: following in order to overtake or capture or as accompaniment to such pursuit; "the fox fled from the pursuing hounds"; "listened for the hounds' pursuing bark"
  • renewing
    adj 1: tending to impart new life and vigor to; "the renewing warmth of the sunshine" [syn: renewing, restorative, reviving, revitalizing, revitalising]
  • rushing
    n 1: (American football) an attempt to advance the ball by running into the line; "the linebackers were ready to stop a rush" [syn: rush, rushing] 2: the act of moving hurriedly and in a careless manner; "in his haste to leave he forgot his book" [syn: haste, hurry, rush, rushing]
  • saying
    n 1: a word or phrase that particular people use in particular situations; "pardon the expression" [syn: saying, expression, locution]
  • screwing
    n 1: slang for sexual intercourse [syn: fuck, fucking, screw, screwing, ass, nooky, nookie, piece of ass, piece of tail, roll in the hay, shag, shtup]
  • showing
    n 1: the display of a motion picture [syn: screening, showing, viewing] 2: something shown to the public; "the museum had many exhibits of oriental art" [syn: display, exhibit, showing]
  • sloughing
    n 1: the process whereby something is shed [syn: shedding, sloughing]
  • stewing
    n 1: an extreme state of worry and agitation; "his stewing over the fight kept him awake most of the night" 2: cooking in a liquid that has been brought to a boil [syn: boiling, stewing, simmering]
  • strewing
    n 1: the act of scattering [syn: scatter, scattering, strewing]
  • undoing
    n 1: an act that makes a previous act of no effect (as if not done) 2: loosening the ties that fasten something; "the tying of bow ties is an art; the untying is easy" [syn: untying, undoing, unfastening]
  • using
    n 1: an act that exploits or victimizes someone (treats them unfairly); "capitalistic exploitation of the working class"; "paying Blacks less and charging them more is a form of victimization" [syn: exploitation, victimization, victimisation, using]
  • viewing
    n 1: the display of a motion picture [syn: screening, showing, viewing] 2: a vigil held over a corpse the night before burial; "there's no weeping at an Irish wake" [syn: wake, viewing]
  • walking
    adj 1: close enough to be walked to; "walking distance"; "the factory with the big parking lot...is more convenient than the walk-to factory" [syn: walk-to(a), walking(a)] n 1: the act of traveling by foot; "walking is a healthy form of exercise" [syn: walk, walking]
  • willing
    adj 1: disposed or inclined toward; "a willing participant"; "willing helpers" [ant: unwilling] 2: not brought about by coercion or force; "the confession was uncoerced" [syn: uncoerced, unforced, willing] n 1: the act of making a choice; "followed my father of my own volition" [syn: volition, willing]
  • wooing
    n 1: a man's courting of a woman; seeking the affections of a woman (usually with the hope of marriage); "its was a brief and intense courtship" [syn: courtship, wooing, courting, suit]
  • writing
    n 1: the act of creating written works; "writing was a form of therapy for him"; "it was a matter of disputed authorship" [syn: writing, authorship, composition, penning] 2: the work of a writer; anything expressed in letters of the alphabet (especially when considered from the point of view of style and effect); "the writing in her novels is excellent"; "that editorial was a fine piece of writing" [syn: writing, written material, piece of writing] 3: (usually plural) the collected work of an author; "the idea occurs with increasing frequency in Hemingway's writings" 4: letters or symbols that are written or imprinted on a surface to represent the sounds or words of a language; "he turned the paper over so the writing wouldn't show"; "the doctor's writing was illegible" 5: the activity of putting something in written form; "she did the thinking while he did the writing" [syn: writing, committal to writing]
  • wrongdoing
    n 1: departure from what is ethically acceptable [syn: error, wrongdoing] 2: activity that transgresses moral or civil law; "he denied any wrongdoing" [syn: wrongdoing, wrongful conduct, misconduct, actus reus]
  • accruing
  • canoeing
  • clueing
  • cluing
  • construing
  • cooing
  • cuing
  • debuting
  • devaluing
  • dewing
  • discontinuing
  • eschewing
  • flipping
  • gluing
  • hewing
  • losing
  • misconstruing
  • misdoing
  • overdoing
  • queueing
  • reviewing
  • ruing
  • shoeing
  • shooing
  • skewing
  • sluing
  • something
  • spewing
  • suing
  • truing
  • booing
  • ewing
  • mewing
  • mooing
  • queuing
  • lewing
  • outdoing
  • tattooing
  • nonaccruing
  • trueing

See also doing synonyms