Chicken and chicken, ones an animal and the others somthing you eat
A homograph has the same spelling with different meanings, maybe different sound. A homonym has the same sound and may have the same spelling, with different meanings.
Sound-alikes or homophones are words that have varying methods of spelling, yet sound the same.
Sound-alikes or homophones are words that have varying methods of spelling, yet sound the same.
Homonym- words that share the same spelling and pronunciation, but have different meanings.
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.)
Sound-alikes or homophones are words that have varying methods of spelling, yet sound the same.
The homophone for "dear" is "deer." Both words sound the same but have different meanings.
The meanings are very close. Both refer to words that have the same sound but different meanings. A homonym also has the same spelling. Homophones can have different spellings as long as the pronunciation is the same.
The word "sound" is both a homograph and a homonym. It is a homograph because it is spelled the same but has multiple meanings, and it is a homonym because it sounds the same but has different meanings depending on context (e.g. "a sound" as in noise, and "sound" as in solid or stable).
A homophone for "chute" is "shoot," as they sound the same but have different meanings.
The word "compass" is a homograph, as it has the same spelling but different meanings. Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings, like "two" and "to." Homonyms are words that are spelled the same and sound the same but have different meanings, like "bat" (flying mammal) and "bat" (sports equipment).
Homonyms are words that sound alike but have different meanings. They can also be spelled the same or differently.