Words that rhyme with toth

  • both
    adj 1: (used with count nouns) two considered together; the two; "both girls are pretty"
  • broth
    n 1: liquid in which meat and vegetables are simmered; used as a basis for e.g. soups or sauces; "she made gravy with a base of beef stock" [syn: broth, stock] 2: a thin soup of meat or fish or vegetable stock
  • cloth
    n 1: artifact made by weaving or felting or knitting or crocheting natural or synthetic fibers; "the fabric in the curtains was light and semitransparent"; "woven cloth originated in Mesopotamia around 5000 BC"; "she measured off enough material for a dress" [syn: fabric, cloth, material, textile]
  • froth
    n 1: a mass of small bubbles formed in or on a liquid; "the beer had a thick head of foam" [syn: foam, froth] v 1: become bubbly or frothy or foaming; "The boiling soup was frothing"; "The river was foaming"; "Sparkling water" [syn: foam, froth, fizz, effervesce, sparkle, form bubbles] 2: make froth or foam and become bubbly; "The river foamed" [syn: froth, spume, suds] 3: exude or expel foam; "the angry man was frothing at the mouth"
  • loath
    adj 1: unwillingness to do something contrary to your custom; "a reluctant smile"; "loath to admit a mistake" [syn: loath, loth, reluctant] 2: (usually followed by `to') strongly opposed; "antipathetic to new ideas"; "averse to taking risks"; "loath to go on such short notice"; "clearly indisposed to grant their request" [syn: antipathetic, antipathetical, averse(p), indisposed(p), loath(p), loth(p)]
  • moth
    n 1: typically crepuscular or nocturnal insect having a stout body and feathery or hairlike antennae
  • oath
    n 1: profane or obscene expression usually of surprise or anger; "expletives were deleted" [syn: curse, curse word, expletive, oath, swearing, swearword, cuss] 2: a commitment to tell the truth (especially in a court of law); to lie under oath is to become subject to prosecution for perjury [syn: oath, swearing] 3: a solemn promise, usually invoking a divine witness, regarding your future acts or behavior; "they took an oath of allegiance"
  • sloth
    n 1: a disinclination to work or exert yourself [syn: sloth, slothfulness] 2: any of several slow-moving arboreal mammals of South America and Central America; they hang from branches back downward and feed on leaves and fruits [syn: sloth, tree sloth] 3: apathy and inactivity in the practice of virtue (personified as one of the deadly sins) [syn: sloth, laziness, acedia]
  • troth
    n 1: a mutual promise to marry [syn: betrothal, troth, engagement] 2: a solemn pledge of fidelity [syn: plight, troth]
  • goth
    n 1: a crude uncouth ill-bred person lacking culture or refinement [syn: peasant, barbarian, boor, churl, Goth, tyke, tike] 2: one of the Teutonic people who invaded the Roman Empire in the 3rd to 5th centuries
  • hoth
    n 1: (Norse mythology) a blind god; misled by Loki, he kills his brother Balder by throwing a shaft of mistletoe [syn: Hoth, Hothr, Hoder, Hodr, Hodur]
  • roth
    n 1: United States writer whose novels portray middle-class Jewish life (born in 1933) [syn: Roth, Philip Roth, Philip Milton Roth]
  • visigoth
    n 1: a member of the western group of Goths who sacked Rome and created a kingdom in present-day Spain and southern France
  • doth
  • auth
  • fauth
  • foth
  • groth
  • hauth
  • kauth
  • kloth
  • knoth
  • koth
  • lauth
  • noth
  • poth
  • shaath
  • rauth
  • schroth
  • quoth