Words that rhyme with pinhead

  • ahead
    adv 1: at or in the front; "I see the lights of a town ahead"; "the road ahead is foggy"; "staring straight ahead"; "we couldn't see over the heads of the people in front"; "with the cross of Jesus marching on before" [syn: ahead, in front, before] 2: toward the future; forward in time; "I like to look ahead in imagination to what the future may bring"; "I look forward to seeing you" [syn: ahead, forward] [ant: back, backward] 3: in a forward direction; "go ahead"; "the train moved ahead slowly"; "the boat lurched ahead"; "moved onward into the forest"; "they went slowly forward in the mud" [syn: ahead, onward, onwards, forward, forwards, forrader] 4: ahead of time; in anticipation; "when you pay ahead (or in advance) you receive a discount"; "We like to plan ahead"; "should have made reservations beforehand" [syn: ahead, in advance, beforehand] 5: to a more advanced or advantageous position; "a young man sure to get ahead"; "pushing talented students ahead" 6: to a different or a more advanced time (meaning advanced either toward the present or toward the future); "moved the appointment ahead from Tuesday to Monday"; "pushed the deadline ahead from Tuesday to Wednesday" 7: leading or ahead in a competition; "the horse was three lengths ahead going into the home stretch"; "ahead by two pawns"; "our candidate is in the lead in the polls"; "way out front in the race"; "the advertising campaign put them out front in sales" [syn: ahead, out front, in the lead] adj 1: having the leading position or higher score in a contest; "he is ahead by a pawn"; "the leading team in the pennant race" [syn: ahead(p), in the lead, leading]
  • airhead
    n 1: a flighty scatterbrained simpleton; "she's a total airhead"; "every airhead on a big salary rushed out to buy one" 2: a bridgehead seized by airborne troops
  • arrowhead
    n 1: the pointed head or striking tip of an arrow
  • baldhead
    n 1: a person whose head is bald [syn: baldhead, baldpate, baldy]
  • beachhead
    n 1: a bridgehead on the enemy's shoreline seized by an amphibious operation; "the Germans were desperately trying to contain the Anzio beachhead" 2: an initial accomplishment that opens the way for further developments; "the town became a beachhead in the campaign to ban smoking outdoors"; "they are presently attempting to gain a foothold in the Russian market" [syn: beachhead, foothold]
  • bed
    n 1: a piece of furniture that provides a place to sleep; "he sat on the edge of the bed"; "the room had only a bed and chair" 2: a plot of ground in which plants are growing; "the gardener planted a bed of roses" 3: a depression forming the ground under a body of water; "he searched for treasure on the ocean bed" [syn: bed, bottom] 4: (geology) a stratum of rock (especially sedimentary rock); "they found a bed of sandstone" 5: a stratum of ore or coal thick enough to be mined with profit; "he worked in the coal beds" [syn: seam, bed] 6: single thickness of usually some homogeneous substance; "slices of hard-boiled egg on a bed of spinach" [syn: layer, bed] 7: the flat surface of a printing press on which the type form is laid in the last stage of producing a newspaper or magazine or book etc. 8: a foundation of earth or rock supporting a road or railroad track; "the track bed had washed away" v 1: furnish with a bed; "The inn keeper could bed all the new arrivals" 2: place (plants) in a prepared bed of soil 3: put to bed; "The children were bedded at ten o'clock" 4: have sexual intercourse with; "This student sleeps with everyone in her dorm"; "Adam knew Eve"; "Were you ever intimate with this man?" [syn: sleep together, roll in the hay, love, make out, make love, sleep with, get laid, have sex, know, do it, be intimate, have intercourse, have it away, have it off, screw, fuck, jazz, eff, hump, lie with, bed, have a go at it, bang, get it on, bonk] 5: prepare for sleep; "I usually turn in at midnight"; "He goes to bed at the crack of dawn" [syn: go to bed, turn in, bed, crawl in, kip down, hit the hay, hit the sack, sack out, go to sleep, retire] [ant: arise, get up, rise, turn out, uprise]
  • behead
    v 1: cut the head of; "the French King was beheaded during the Revolution" [syn: decapitate, behead, decollate]
  • blackhead
    n 1: a black-tipped plug clogging a pore of the skin [syn: blackhead, comedo]
  • blockhead
    n 1: a stupid person; these words are used to express a low opinion of someone's intelligence [syn: dunce, dunderhead, numskull, blockhead, bonehead, lunkhead, hammerhead, knucklehead, loggerhead, muttonhead, shithead, dumbass, fuckhead]
  • bonehead
    n 1: a stupid person; these words are used to express a low opinion of someone's intelligence [syn: dunce, dunderhead, numskull, blockhead, bonehead, lunkhead, hammerhead, knucklehead, loggerhead, muttonhead, shithead, dumbass, fuckhead]
  • bowhead
    n 1: large-mouthed Arctic whale [syn: bowhead, bowhead whale, Greenland whale, Balaena mysticetus]
  • bread
    n 1: food made from dough of flour or meal and usually raised with yeast or baking powder and then baked [syn: bread, breadstuff, staff of life] 2: informal terms for money [syn: boodle, bread, cabbage, clams, dinero, dough, gelt, kale, lettuce, lolly, lucre, loot, moolah, pelf, scratch, shekels, simoleons, sugar, wampum] v 1: cover with bread crumbs; "bread the pork chops before frying them"
  • bridgehead
    n 1: an area in hostile territory that has been captured and is held awaiting further troops and supplies; "an attempt to secure a bridgehead behind enemy lines"; "the only foothold left for British troops in Europe was Gibraltar" [syn: bridgehead, foothold] 2: a defensive post at the end of a bridge nearest to the enemy
  • bufflehead
    n 1: small North American diving duck; males have bushy head plumage [syn: bufflehead, butterball, dipper, Bucephela albeola]
  • bulkhead
    n 1: a partition that divides a ship or plane into compartments
  • bullhead
    n 1: freshwater sculpin with a large flattened bony-plated head with hornlike spines 2: any of several common freshwater catfishes of the United States [syn: bullhead, bullhead catfish]
  • copperhead
    n 1: common coppery brown pit viper of upland eastern United States [syn: copperhead, Agkistrodon contortrix] 2: venomous but sluggish reddish-brown snake of Australia [syn: copperhead, Denisonia superba]
  • dead
    adv 1: quickly and without warning; "he stopped suddenly" [syn: abruptly, suddenly, short, dead] 2: completely and without qualification; used informally as intensifiers; "an absolutely magnificent painting"; "a perfectly idiotic idea"; "you're perfectly right"; "utterly miserable"; "you can be dead sure of my innocence"; "was dead tired"; "dead right" [syn: absolutely, perfectly, utterly, dead] adj 1: no longer having or seeming to have or expecting to have life; "the nerve is dead"; "a dead pallor"; "he was marked as a dead man by the assassin" [ant: alive(p), live] 2: not showing characteristics of life especially the capacity to sustain life; no longer exerting force or having energy or heat; "Mars is a dead planet"; "dead soil"; "dead coals"; "the fire is dead" [ant: live] 3: very tired; "was all in at the end of the day"; "so beat I could flop down and go to sleep anywhere"; "bushed after all that exercise"; "I'm dead after that long trip" [syn: all in(p), beat(p), bushed(p), dead(p)] 4: unerringly accurate; "a dead shot"; "took dead aim" 5: physically inactive; "Crater Lake is in the crater of a dead volcano of the Cascade Range" 6: (followed by `to') not showing human feeling or sensitivity; unresponsive; "passersby were dead to our plea for help"; "numb to the cries for mercy" [syn: dead(p), numb(p)] 7: devoid of physical sensation; numb; "his gums were dead from the novocain"; "she felt no discomfort as the dentist drilled her deadened tooth"; "a public desensitized by continuous television coverage of atrocities" [syn: dead, deadened] 8: lacking acoustic resonance; "dead sounds characteristic of some compact discs"; "the dead wall surfaces of a recording studio" 9: not yielding a return; "dead capital"; "idle funds" [syn: dead, idle] 10: not circulating or flowing; "dead air"; "dead water"; "stagnant water" [syn: dead(a), stagnant] 11: not surviving in active use; "Latin is a dead language" 12: lacking resilience or bounce; "a dead tennis ball" 13: out of use or operation because of a fault or breakdown; "a dead telephone line"; "the motor is dead" 14: no longer having force or relevance; "a dead issue" 15: complete; "came to a dead stop"; "utter seriousness" [syn: dead(a), utter] 16: drained of electric charge; discharged; "a dead battery"; "left the lights on and came back to find the battery drained" [syn: dead, drained] 17: devoid of activity; "this is a dead town; nothing ever happens here" n 1: people who are no longer living; "they buried the dead" [ant: living] 2: a time when coldness (or some other quality associated with death) is intense; "the dead of winter"
  • deadhead
    n 1: a nonenterprising person who is not paying his way; "the deadheads on the payroll should be eased out as fast as possible" 2: a train or bus or taxi traveling empty
  • drumhead
    adj 1: performed speedily and without formality; "a summary execution"; "summary justice" [syn: drumhead, summary] n 1: a membrane that is stretched taut over a drum [syn: drumhead, head]
  • dunderhead
    n 1: a stupid person; these words are used to express a low opinion of someone's intelligence [syn: dunce, dunderhead, numskull, blockhead, bonehead, lunkhead, hammerhead, knucklehead, loggerhead, muttonhead, shithead, dumbass, fuckhead]
  • egghead
    n 1: an intellectual; a very studious and academic person; "in spite of her love of reading she denied being an egghead"
  • fathead
    n 1: a man who is a stupid incompetent fool [syn: fathead, goof, goofball, bozo, jackass, goose, cuckoo, twat, zany]
  • figurehead
    n 1: a person used as a cover for some questionable activity [syn: front man, front, figurehead, nominal head, straw man, strawman] 2: figure on the bow of some sailing vessels
  • flathead
    n 1: food fish of the Indonesian region of the Pacific; resembles gurnards 2: pallid bottom-dwelling flat-headed fish with large eyes and a duck-like snout
  • fountainhead
    n 1: an abundant source; "she was a well of information" [syn: well, wellspring, fountainhead] 2: the source of water from which a stream arises; "they tracked him back toward the head of the stream" [syn: fountainhead, headspring, head]
  • godhead
    n 1: terms referring to the Judeo-Christian God [syn: Godhead, Lord, Creator, Maker, Divine, God Almighty, Almighty, Jehovah]
  • hammerhead
    n 1: a stupid person; these words are used to express a low opinion of someone's intelligence [syn: dunce, dunderhead, numskull, blockhead, bonehead, lunkhead, hammerhead, knucklehead, loggerhead, muttonhead, shithead, dumbass, fuckhead] 2: the striking part of a hammer 3: medium-sized live-bearing shark with eyes at either end of a flattened hammer-shaped head; worldwide in warm waters; can be dangerous [syn: hammerhead, hammerhead shark]
  • hogshead
    n 1: a British unit of capacity for alcoholic beverages 2: a large cask especially one holding 63 gals
  • hothead
    n 1: a belligerent grouch [syn: fire-eater, hothead] 2: a reckless impetuous irresponsible person [syn: daredevil, madcap, hothead, swashbuckler, lunatic, harum- scarum]
  • knucklehead
    n 1: a stupid person; these words are used to express a low opinion of someone's intelligence [syn: dunce, dunderhead, numskull, blockhead, bonehead, lunkhead, hammerhead, knucklehead, loggerhead, muttonhead, shithead, dumbass, fuckhead]
  • letterhead
    n 1: a sheet of stationery with name and address of the organization printed at the top
  • loggerhead
    n 1: a stupid person; these words are used to express a low opinion of someone's intelligence [syn: dunce, dunderhead, numskull, blockhead, bonehead, lunkhead, hammerhead, knucklehead, loggerhead, muttonhead, shithead, dumbass, fuckhead] 2: very large carnivorous sea turtle; wide-ranging in warm open seas [syn: loggerhead, loggerhead turtle, Caretta caretta]
  • maidenhead
    n 1: a fold of tissue that partly covers the entrance to the vagina of a virgin [syn: hymen, maidenhead, virginal membrane]
  • masthead
    n 1: a listing printed in all issues of a newspaper or magazine (usually on the editorial page) that gives the name of the publication and the names of the editorial staff, etc. [syn: masthead, flag] 2: the title of a newspaper or magazine; usually printed on the front page and on the editorial page 3: the head or top of a mast
  • muttonhead
    n 1: a stupid person; these words are used to express a low opinion of someone's intelligence [syn: dunce, dunderhead, numskull, blockhead, bonehead, lunkhead, hammerhead, knucklehead, loggerhead, muttonhead, shithead, dumbass, fuckhead]
  • overhead
    adv 1: above your head; in the sky; "planes were flying overhead" 2: above the head; over the head; "bring the legs together overhead" adj 1: located or originating from above; "an overhead crossing" [ant: subsurface, surface] n 1: the expense of maintaining property (e.g., paying property taxes and utilities and insurance); it does not include depreciation or the cost of financing or income taxes [syn: operating expense, operating cost, overhead, budget items] 2: (computer science) the processing time required by a device prior to the execution of a command [syn: command processing overhead time, command processing overhead, command overhead, overhead] 3: (computer science) the disk space required for information that is not data but is used for location and timing [syn: disk overhead, overhead] 4: a transparency for use with an overhead projector [syn: viewgraph, overhead] 5: (nautical) the top surface of an enclosed space on a ship 6: a hard return hitting the tennis ball above your head [syn: overhead, smash]
  • pithead
    n 1: the entrance to a coal mine
  • pothead
    n 1: someone who smokes marijuana habitually
  • railhead
    n 1: a railroad depot in a theater of operations where military supplies are unloaded for distribution 2: the end of the completed track on an unfinished railway
  • redhead
    n 1: someone who has red hair [syn: redhead, redheader, red-header, carrottop] 2: North American diving duck with a grey-and-black body and reddish-brown head [syn: redhead, Aythya americana] 3: black-and-white North American woodpecker having a red head and neck [syn: redheaded woodpecker, redhead, Melanerpes erythrocephalus]
  • roundhead
    n 1: a brachycephalic person 2: a supporter of parliament and Oliver Cromwell during the English Civil War
  • shovelhead
    n 1: small harmless hammerhead having a spade-shaped head; abundant in bays and estuaries [syn: shovelhead, bonnethead, bonnet shark, Sphyrna tiburo]
  • skinhead
    n 1: a young person who belongs to a British or American group that shave their heads and gather at rock concerts or engage in white supremacist demonstrations
  • sleepyhead
    n 1: a sleepy person
  • sorehead
    n 1: someone who is peevish or disgruntled
  • spearhead
    n 1: someone who leads or initiates an activity (attack or campaign etc.) 2: the leading military unit in an attack 3: the head and sharpened point of a spear [syn: spearhead, spearpoint, spear-point] v 1: be the leader of; "She spearheaded the effort to find a cure for the disease"
  • subhead
    n 1: a heading of a subdivision of a text [syn: subheading, subhead]
  • thickhead
    n 1: Australian and southeastern Asian birds with a melodious whistling call [syn: thickhead, whistler]
  • thunderhead
    n 1: a rounded projecting mass of a cumulus cloud with shining edges; often appears before a thunderstorm
  • towhead
    n 1: a person with light blond hair
  • warhead
    n 1: the front part of a guided missile or rocket or torpedo that carries the nuclear or explosive charge or the chemical or biological agents [syn: warhead, payload, load]
  • wellhead
    n 1: the source of water for a well [syn: wellhead, wellspring] 2: a structure built over a well
  • lunkhead
    n 1: a stupid person; these words are used to express a low opinion of someone's intelligence [syn: dunce, dunderhead, numskull, blockhead, bonehead, lunkhead, hammerhead, knucklehead, loggerhead, muttonhead, shithead, dumbass, fuckhead]
  • stairhead
    n 1: platform at the top of a staircase
  • whitehead
    n 1: English philosopher and mathematician who collaborated with Bertrand Russell (1861-1947) [syn: Whitehead, Alfred North Whitehead] 2: a small whitish lump in the skin due to a clogged sebaceous gland [syn: whitehead, milium]
  • bonnethead
    n 1: small harmless hammerhead having a spade-shaped head; abundant in bays and estuaries [syn: shovelhead, bonnethead, bonnet shark, Sphyrna tiburo]
  • dickhead
    n 1: insulting terms of address for people who are stupid or irritating or ridiculous [syn: asshole, bastard, cocksucker, dickhead, shit, mother fucker, motherfucker, prick, whoreson, son of a bitch, SOB]
  • bled
  • bred
  • cathead
  • chucklehead
  • featherhead
  • greenhead
  • leatherhead
  • woodenhead
  • broadhead
  • dumbhead
  • gateshead
  • meathead
  • muirhead
  • spithead
  • woodhead
  • barrelhead
  • birkenhead
  • holinshed
  • holyhead
  • weatherhead
  • basehead

See also pinhead definition and pinhead synonyms