bare, bear
prays, preys, praise
karat, carrot
Homonyms sound the same, but are spelled differently. Many, many people get 'their' 'there' and 'they're' mixed up, for example, due to their similar sounds.
Lead
with the same sound but differ spelling
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.)
They are called "homonyms".
Actually "their" is a homophone for "there". Homonyms must have the same spelling and pronunciation but different meanings. An example is palm - part of you hand or a tree.There is no homonym for there.
Homonyms are words that have the same spelling and pronunciation but have different meanings .
two or more words having the same spelling but different meanings
Homophones are words that have exactly the same sound but are different in meaning and spelling.for example : hour, ourHomographs are words that have the same spelling but different meanings and may or may not be pronounced the same way.for example : bear (the animal), bear (to carry)Homonyms have the same sound and same spelling with a different meaning.Homophones have the same sound but different spellings and meanings.Homographs have the same spelling but a different meaning (and possibly a different sound).
"I" and "aye" are the only homophones of "eye" that I can think of...no homographs or homonyms.
Yes, The word 'bill' it is a homonym. Two different meanings, but share the same spelling and the same pronunciation.
What is a word that has same meaning but is different in spelling examples