Noise
Audio
Yes. The word "that" has the short A sound as in cat and hat. The sound is slightly different from the short A in thanks.
The word you are looking for is "pun." A pun is a play on words that relies on a word's multiple meanings or on two words that sound similar but have different meanings.
dont know if it has one
I think aw sound gas a different vowel so it makes different sound.Aw sounds like *OR*
The A has a short A sound as in the word "rat" -- this is slightly different from the short A heard in the words crab and drab.
A homophone is a word with the same sound as another word but with a different meaning and spelling. There is no homophone for lemon
The word 'the' can be pronounced in different ways depending on context. It is sometimes pronounced with the schwa when the following word begins with a consonant.
Yes, it does. It has the short A as in stand and clamp. This is slightly different from the short A heard in the word stack.
The E in "were" has a caret I vowel sound, which is a short U + R sound (wur).This is not the same as a short E and slightly different from the short U.The word "were" rhymes with her, sir, and fur.
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.
It is called a homophone. Homophones are words that sound the same when pronounced, but have different meanings and often different spellings.
Homophones are two words that sound the same but are spelled differently and have different meanings. Examples include "they're," "there," and "their."