pair,pear...hear,here...right,write...then,than...wear,where
Homophones for "rode" include road and rowed. Homophones for "pairs" include pears and pares.
Some examples of homophones are: "their" and "there" "hear" and "here" "bare" and "bear" "flower" and "flour"
Ear and year are homophones, meaning they are pronounced the same but have different meanings and spellings.
The homophones for "loan" are "lone" and "lown."
Two homophone pairs are "allowed" and "aloud", and "hear" and "here". Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings or spellings.
Homophones for "rode" include road and rowed. Homophones for "pairs" include pears and pares.
Fair and fare Hear and here Knight and night Piece and peace Right and write
Some examples of homophones are: "their" and "there" "hear" and "here" "bare" and "bear" "flower" and "flour"
There are two pairs of homophones in that sentence...In and InnDaze and Days
Pair (noun: a set of two things) and pear (noun: a type of fruit). Peace (noun: tranquility) and piece (noun: a part of something). Flower (noun: a plant) and flour (noun: ground wheat). Waste (noun: unusable material) and waist (noun: part of the body). Mail (noun: letters) and male (noun: a man or boy). Hair (noun: strands growing on the head) and hare (noun: a fast animal). Right (adjective: correct) and write (verb: to put words on paper). See (verb: to look) and sea (noun: large body of salt water). Son (noun: male child) and sun (noun: star in our solar system). Flour (noun: powder used in baking) and flower (noun: plant that blooms).
Homophones are words that have different meanings but sound the same when pronounced. They have different spellings. They may have different origins and meanings. They can be confusing for language learners and lead to misunderstandings in communication.
homophones
The homophones for "loan" are "lone" and "lown."
no/know
they are homophones
Some examples are "sea" and "see," "right" and "write," "ate" and "eight," and "flower" and "flour." These are known as homophones.
No. For example, close, meaning to shut a door or window or whatever, and close, meaning nearby, are homophones with the same spelling but different meanings.