Words that rhyme with galilee
Galilee is a 2-syllable word with 81 perfect rhymes. The most popular rhymes are blear, alee, drear. This word appears in songs across our database, making it a versatile choice for songwriters and poets.
Definition of galilee
- an area of northern Israel; formerly the northern part of Palestine and the ancient kingdom of Israel; the scene of Jesus's ministry
1 syllable
- blear
- alee
- drear
- fleer
- hear
- jeer
- mere
- near
- pier
- queer
- rear
- sere
- smear
- sneer
- sphere
- tier
- veer
- year
- trier
- cere
- tyr
- beer
- bier
- cheer
- clear
- dear
- deer
- fear
- gear
- leer
- peer
- sear
- seer
- shear
- sheer
- spear
- steer
- tear
- weir
- deere
- lear
- pierre
- rhea
- we're
- allee
- kir
- mir
- stere
- zia
- freer
- grier
- bere
- frere
- greer
- kier
- shere
- speir
- vere
- lehr
- mia
- keir
2 syllables
Examples of "galilee" in lyrics
See how galilee is used at the end of a line in songs:
-
"Then Phillip and Nathaniel in the town of Galilee"
Sean Slaughter — 13th Apostle -
"sea of galilee"
AOL — AOL -
"map sea of galilee"
AOL — AOL
What do these rhymes mean?
- alee
- on or toward the lee; "put the helm alee"
- blear
- tired to the point of exhaustion make dim or indistinct; "The fog blurs my vision"
- drear
- causing dejection; "a blue day"; "the dark days of the war"; "a week of rainy depressing weather
- fleer
- someone who flees from an uncongenial situation
- hear
- perceive (sound) via the auditory sense get to know or become aware of, usually accidentally
Use "galilee" in a verse
Ready to write? Generate rap lyrics using "galilee" as your theme:
Generate a verseMore about "galilee"
Rhyming tips for songwriters
When using "galilee" in your lyrics, consider mixing perfect rhymes with near rhymes (slant rhymes) for a more natural flow. Perfect rhymes like blear, alee, drear create a satisfying resolution, while slant rhymes add variety and keep listeners engaged.
Since "galilee" has 2 syllables, try matching it with words of similar length for a balanced meter. Multi-syllable rhymes often sound more sophisticated than single-syllable pairs.
