yes.
Sound-alikes or homophones are words that have varying methods of spelling, yet sound the same.
Hey!If you mean like rhyming - here is what I got =]aidhaidbraidquaidspaidstaidmaidpaidraidzaidwaiderepaidmcquaidunafraidafraidunderpaidOR IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER:aaidabovesaidabraidaforesaidafraidaidalcaidansaidapaidbandaidbarmaidbelaidbondmaidbraidbridemaidbridesmaidcablelaidcaidchambermaidcookmaiddairymaiddanaiddaymaidembraidenkaidforesaidgainsaidhandmaidhousemaidimbraidinlaidinterlaidkincaidkitchenmaidlactaidlaidlyraidmaidmedicaidmermaidmilkmaidmislaidnaidnavaidniaidnoraidnsaidnursemaidoutlaidoverlaidoverpaidpaidparlormaidparlourmaidplaidpostpaidprepaidquaidraidrelaidrepaidsaidschoolmaidshopmaidspaidstaidsubaidthebaiducaidunafraidunbraidunderaidunderlaidunderpaidunlaidunpaidunplaidunsaidupbraidusaidwaidwaylaid
Answer: "phonetic" is an alphabetical representation of the word phonetic.There could be a phonetic representation of the word phonetic as /fəˈnetɪk/.The users of the language English have agreed upon the spelling system they have today.However unscientific, fraught with bizarre rules it might be, it is part of the agreement of the users of that language. The same should apply roughly to all spelling systems. Yes, including devnagari spelling systems as well. No spelling system can be expected to be faithful to the exact pronunciations. That is how the facts are.
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.)
It is pronounced exactly as it is written - the phonetic spelling would be the same as the correct spelling. Accent is on the second syllable.
Words that have the same vowel sound as the word "said" include "bed," "red," "head," and "bread." These words all contain the long vowel sound /ɛ/ as in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) symbol for the vowel in "said." This sound is known as the "short e" sound in traditional phonetic terminology.
Because Russian lacks the combined consonant sound 'th', an 'f' is used instead. Russian Cyrillic is also phonetic, so the letter 'e' with a long sound in English is transliterated as the vowel 'и' in Russian, representing the same sound. The spelling then becomes 'Afena', or Афина when using Cyrillic.
THEY'RE is the spelling for the contraction THEY ARE.THEIR is the spelling for the pronoun as in "their presents".THERE is the spelling for the placement word as in "over there".These three words are called homophones - they sound the same but are spelled differently and mean different things
Sound-alikes or homophones are words that have varying methods of spelling, yet sound the same.
Words that start with the same sound as "monkey" include "money," "mango," and "mummy." These words share the initial "m" sound, creating a phonetic similarity. Additionally, "monday" and "muzzle" also begin with the same sound.
Homophones.
they both have the same sound of each word even the same spelling