Words that rhyme with plumer

  • bloomer
    n 1: a flower that blooms in a particular way; "a night bloomer" 2: an embarrassing mistake [syn: blunder, blooper, bloomer, bungle, pratfall, foul-up, fuckup, flub, botch, boner, boo-boo]
  • boomer
    n 1: a member of the baby boom generation in the 1950s; "they expanded the schools for a generation of baby boomers" [syn: baby boomer, boomer]
  • consumer
    n 1: a person who uses goods or services
  • costumer
    n 1: someone who designs or supplies costumes (as for a play or masquerade) [syn: costumier, costumer, costume designer]
  • humour
    n 1: a characteristic (habitual or relatively temporary) state of feeling; "whether he praised or cursed me depended on his temper at the time"; "he was in a bad humor" [syn: temper, mood, humor, humour] 2: a message whose ingenuity or verbal skill or incongruity has the power to evoke laughter [syn: wit, humor, humour, witticism, wittiness] 3: (Middle Ages) one of the four fluids in the body whose balance was believed to determine your emotional and physical state; "the humors are blood and phlegm and yellow and black bile" [syn: humor, humour] 4: the liquid parts of the body [syn: liquid body substance, bodily fluid, body fluid, humor, humour] 5: the quality of being funny; "I fail to see the humor in it" [syn: humor, humour] 6: the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor" [syn: humor, humour, sense of humor, sense of humour] v 1: put into a good mood [syn: humor, humour]
  • roomer
    n 1: a tenant in someone's house [syn: lodger, boarder, roomer]
  • rumour
    n 1: gossip (usually a mixture of truth and untruth) passed around by word of mouth [syn: rumor, rumour, hearsay] v 1: tell or spread rumors; "It was rumored that the next president would be a woman" [syn: rumor, rumour, bruit]
  • tumour
    n 1: an abnormal new mass of tissue that serves no purpose [syn: tumor, tumour, neoplasm]
  • humor
    n 1: a message whose ingenuity or verbal skill or incongruity has the power to evoke laughter [syn: wit, humor, humour, witticism, wittiness] 2: the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor" [syn: humor, humour, sense of humor, sense of humour] 3: a characteristic (habitual or relatively temporary) state of feeling; "whether he praised or cursed me depended on his temper at the time"; "he was in a bad humor" [syn: temper, mood, humor, humour] 4: the quality of being funny; "I fail to see the humor in it" [syn: humor, humour] 5: (Middle Ages) one of the four fluids in the body whose balance was believed to determine your emotional and physical state; "the humors are blood and phlegm and yellow and black bile" [syn: humor, humour] 6: the liquid parts of the body [syn: liquid body substance, bodily fluid, body fluid, humor, humour] v 1: put into a good mood [syn: humor, humour]
  • rumor
    n 1: gossip (usually a mixture of truth and untruth) passed around by word of mouth [syn: rumor, rumour, hearsay] v 1: tell or spread rumors; "It was rumored that the next president would be a woman" [syn: rumor, rumour, bruit]
  • tumor
    n 1: an abnormal new mass of tissue that serves no purpose [syn: tumor, tumour, neoplasm]
  • coomer
  • schumer
  • okuma
  • blumer
  • bruemmer
  • brumer