Words That Rhyme With “Cat”

What are some words that rhyme with cat?

Here are popular one-syllable perfect rhymes for cat:

  • Bat
  • Brat
  • Chat
  • Fat
  • Flat
  • Gnat
  • Hat
  • Mat
  • Pat
  • Rat
  • Sat
  • Splat
  • That

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a perfect rhyme for “cat”?

A perfect rhyme repeats the stressed vowel and every sound that follows it. Words like bat, flat, hat, rat, and that all end in /-æt/, so they’re textbook matches.

Are there any multi-syllable words that rhyme with “cat”?

Yes! Try combat, wombat, top-hat, cool-cat, copy-cat, scallywag-cat (compound), acrobat, bureaucrat, diplomat, aristocrat, and autocrat. Longer rhymes stretch your meter and add vivid imagery.

What counts as a slant (near) rhyme with “cat”?

Slant rhymes echo only part of the sound—think cut, kit, caught, cot, kite, or coat—handy when perfect rhymes start sounding repetitive.

How can I use “cat” rhymes in songwriting?

  • Character hooks: Pair cat with brat, copy-cat, wombat to build narrative.

  • Internal rhymes: “Tip the hat, stroke the cat.”

  • Compound chains: “Cool-cat, gone-bat, never flat—watch me chat.”

Do accents affect these rhymes?

Only slightly. Most English dialects pronounce “cat” /kæt/. Some Northern-UK accents raise it toward /kɛt/, but the final /t/ stays, so rhymes above still land for most listeners.

Are there eye-rhymes for “cat”?

Yes—“what,” “plait,” “bait” look similar on the page but differ in sound. Eye-rhymes help when visual symmetry matters more than exact phonetics.

Can I rhyme “cat” with itself?

Absolutely. Identity rhyme can emphasize theme: “Cat after cat, on the welcome mat.” Use sparingly so it feels intentional, not lazy.

Which literary devices pair well with a “cat” rhyme?

  • Alliteration: “Clever copper-coated cat.”

  • Metaphor: “Hope is a stray cat—feed it and it stays.”

  • Anaphora: “Cat of night, cat of grace, cat of quiet pace…”

Are there verbs that rhyme with “cat”?

Yes—bat (to hit), chat, flat (as a verb meaning to flatten), pat, rat (slang to betray), sat (past of sit), spat, and that (dialect verb to thrive).

How do rappers chain multiple “-at” rhymes?

They weave internal echoes and multi-syllable stacks: “Copy-cat, watch me chat, tip my hat, never flat—slick like that.”