they are called homophones there is a long list on this website:http://www.bifroest.demon.co.uk/misc/homophones-list.html here are some examples: 1. deer, dear 2. tee, tea 3. see, sea 4. read, red 5. led, lead 6. through, threw 7. eight, ate 8. beet, beat
it provide the same meaning but different spelling and pronunciation
They are called "homonyms".
They are homographs.
Bored - board; bore - boar; moor - more; sow - sew; doe - dough.
The word sound is both a homograph and a homonym. The spelling and pronunciation for 'sound' does not change with the different meanings: Did you hear that sound? (sound meaning noise) Is he of sound mind? (sound meaning in good condition) Homograph means that the words have the same spelling, but different meaning (regardless of pronunciation). Homonym means that the words have the same spelling, and the same pronunciation, but a different meaning. Therefore all homonyms are homophones.
Multiple meaning words that share the same spelling and the same pronunciation but have different meanings in different contexts.
It is a homograph because the spelling and meaning is different but the pronunciation is the same.
What is a word that has same meaning but is different in spelling examples
The homonym for bridle would be bridal, as it has the same pronunciation, but a different meaning, origin, or spelling.
It is a word with same pronunciation's but different spelling and meaning .example:pear-pair
Homographs are two or more than two words that have same spellings, same pronunciation but are different in meaning. Heteronyms are two or more words with same spelling but different pronunciation and different meaning.
False. They are synonyms ( they mean the same thing). Homonyms have the same spelling and the same pronunciation, but different meanings. (For the record, same sound, different meaning and spelling are homophones; same spelling, different sound and meaning are homographs.)