No, because a heteronym are words that are written identically but have different pronunciations and meanings(like homographs that are not homophones).
Wound. As in you wound something around (coiled), or you received a wound (an injury.)
There is about 78 but heaps more if you start considering words derived from other languages. I read a lot and I find that you often don't even notice that you have a read a sentence containing a heteronym.
A lethargy of students
it would be student's because students implies more than one student and if you are talking about more than one student's mother it would be the students' mothers
Subject: students or complete subject: the students from the space research centreNouns: students, centre, evening
Yes, Slough is a heteronym, if you count names.
The heteronym for "to comfort" is "to monitor." An upright case refers to a vertical support structure for computer components.
Present
Hai
Words that are spelled differently but sound the same are called homophones.
Row
An example of a heteronym in a sentence would be: "The wind was strong enough to wind up the kite." In this sentence, "wind" is a heteronym because it is pronounced differently but spelled the same.
A homonym, like bear (the animal) and bear (to carry).
One word with many meanings is a homograph.
Wound. As in you wound something around (coiled), or you received a wound (an injury.)
Sow, but they are pronounced differently. The pig is like "ow" and the seed dispersion is like "sew."
Heterogenous, heterogeneous, heteroclite, heterodox, heteropathy . . . . heterosexual