| RHYMED | Had a similar sound |
| RHYME | Have a similar sound |
| RHYMING | Having a similar sound |
| MALAPROPISMS | Unintentional misuses of words by confusion with those of a similar sound (12) |
| CLUCK | An imitative call of a mother to her chicks; or, any similar sound expressing fussy concern (5) |
| RHYMER | Thomas of Erceldoune, or similar sound writer |
| PEAR | Two similar sound fruit (4) |
| BLEEPS | Electronically summons student among similar sounds(6) |
| ASSONANT | Having similar sounds |
| ALLITERATE | Make similar sounds everyone gets to repeat |
| COMPARE | Represent as similar; sounds like emcee |
| ASSONANCE | Poetic device involving the repetition of similar sounds |
| RHYMES | Similar sounds at the ends of lines of poetry (6) |
| ZIPZAPZOP | Improv warm-up that involves clapping while repeating three similar sounds |
| APRON | A coverall of a chef, cobbler, cook, farrier or potter, for example, tied at the back; or, a similar garment, such as a girl's pinafore worn over a dress, or that of a bishop or Freemason (5) |
| BARREL | A cask made by a cooper; a similar keg in miniature whose customary suspension from a St Bernard's collar is attributed to a painting by Sir Edwin Landseer; or, a horse's belly (6) |
| PARACHUTE | An umbrella-like canopy deployed to slow descent through the air; or, serving a similar purpose, a downy pappus of a dandelion clock or a patagium of a flying squirrel (9) |
| SIT | A mode or spell of perching, posing or resting one's posterior on a saddle, settle, sofa, stall or stool; or, a somewhat Barbara Woodhouse-ish command to a dog to assume a similar such ensconced posit |
| SCHOOL | Known in French as a manege, a type of arena for equestrianism; or, a group of artists sharing a similar style (6) |
| NOODLE | A long, thin strip of pasta or a similar flour paste, eaten with a sauce or in a soup (6) |